100-year scrapbook Searchable History Archives of Greenville Hospital System University Medical Center 1912-2012 ghs.org/100years Scrapbook: 1970 Compiled By: Southeastern Digital Imaging, Ken S.Parker PO Box 503 Taylors, SC 29687 864.292.0006 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT January 1, 1970 Hospital Has Decade Of Crisis, Progress In May of" _ .that ; , , , year, the Ti. i new vocational rehabilitation unit was completed and dedicated. A cardio-vascular unit broadened the scope of Later that same month, on' diagnostic services. Sept. 21, then Vice President Other special medical and Hubert H. Humphrey came nursing completed and to Greenville to speak at opened units in 1968 included: ground breaking ceremonies construction and enlargement for the new community mental of an limbed intensive care health center, the first struc- unit, replacing former six-bed ture planned for construction constructing and equipon the Greenville Hospital unit; ping a Cobalt. Therapy unit; System's new Grove Road a new coronary care unit; campus. Costs of this new a new spinal cord unit and facility, which would be the a special procedures unit in sixth hospital division of the the of radiology. Hospital System upon com- Totaldepartment costs for these im-. pletion, totaled $2,250,000. provements to update medical: A report • on a comIn November of that year, facilities were placed a t prehensive feasibility study by plans were announced for a $1,000,000. a national consultant recomrehabilitation facilimended a two-year medical vocational GreenviHe. COM ty at Graenville General school in the Greenville area, Hospital, with an addition over reached top priority' in 1968 which "would have a existing emergency room to" receive H i l l - B u r t o n penetrating impact in medical, the to provide badly needed space (federal) hospital construction hospital and educational fields for enlarged diagnostic and funds, allocated to South here," as well as "be a boon treatment faciUties to meet Carolina, toward development The two new h o s p i t a l to all concerned in 'the Pied- urgent pressing needs. The of hospital facilities to meet divisions, Roger Huntington mont area." project cost $496,687, and the 'urgent community needs. The Acquisition of a 128-acre site areas developed expecialiy af- Board of Trustees decided Nursing Center, with an 80-bed capacity, at Greer, a n d on Grove Road by Greenville fected the departments of upon a hospital bond referendum to help finance the longHillcrest Hospital, with 40 Hospital System was an-., laboratories and radiology. beds, at Simpsonville, were nounced in. 1966 by the-he^- An in - depth study of new ,t ange program of new hospital completed and opened in of trustees. Purchase f methods of preparing foods facilities. the land to be develo 1963. for patients more efficiently the new community hoSfSKB' at less That November, Greenvillf. A comprehensive study of expense was uncenter was $715,443. over-all medical and hospital dertaken in 1968. Assisting the- County voters r e s p o n d e d The Greenville C o u n t y three hospitals in t h e favorably, and the referendum needs in Greenville County and area for the next 20 years Legislative Delegation deeded area—Greenville G e n e r a l , ! was passed. In December, 1968, the was initiated in.. 1.964. This in- the maternity shelter facility Spartanburg General and 1 depth study Sj>kined eight and property on Pendleton Anderson Memorial—with the board of trustees named the months anti was'conducted by Street to Greenville Hospital study was the Duke Endow- new mental health center on a nationally r e c o g n i z e d System for development of a, ment. Findings resulted in Grove Road, then nearly comfifth hospital division. hospital consultant. development of new AGS pleted, the Marshall I. Pickens The Medicare program im-, Packaging and Processing Hospital in honor of the ViceIn 1965, Greenville Hospital System sought to m e e t posed increased pressures on Food System, which has at- chairman of The Duke Endow': tracted national interest and ment, which has assisted provisions of civil rights laws hospitals and facilities. On Sept. 8, 1967, the new attention. various health and hospital pertaining to hospital and programs in the area for over nursing care by providing and William G. Sirrine Hospital, Grants were r e c e i v e d making available equal health planned and designed for the toward construction of cobalt 40 years. On March 8, 1969, the new facilities and services to all care of chronic and con- therapy and coronary care patients, w a s MarshaU I Pickens Hospital patients without discrimina- valescent dedicated and opened. Con- units. By MIRIAM• GOODSPEED The dawn of the 1960s brought Greenville Hospital System into its years of crisis as the population and inhere dustrial explosion brought increased hospital needs. Plans made a n d construction begun in the decade just past should alleviate the growth problems of the 1970s, hospital authorities believe. In 1960, new facilities for clinics at Greenville General Hospital were completed and occupied. Construction began in 1961 for enlarging emergency room facilities to meet growing community requirements. By 1962, this work was completed, and construction was begun on a new $822,000 hospital at Simpsonville and an $800,000 nursing center at Greer. -. —i . _ its . ' master It also completed development plan for phased , expansion and improvement of i hospital facilities to meet the ' pressing community needs. The plan was approved by the board of trustees, and an exhaustive search was begun ! for a site to accommodate major new h o s p i t a l construction. The Greenville H o s p i t a l System also initiated action 1 to enlarge the 51-bed Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital at : Greer, by that time operating at 112 per cent capacity, to 63-beds. i j struction and renovation cosfsl amounted to approximately $350,000. 70-1 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] iwas compieteo and receivea iir-ac nnm^tpTort a.nrl rAPCIVKV its first patients. | Planning continued for a .new hospital facility in north Greenville County to serve residents of that area, and for enlarging H i l l c r e s t Hospital at Simpsonville and, Allen Bennett M e m o r i a l Hospital at Greer. The Appalachian Regional Planning and Development Commission awarded a grant of $1,800,000 to Greenville Hospital System toward a new rehabilitative me d i c i n e hospital to- -serve regional needs. The Peace Fund of GreenviUe made a contribution o $300,000 to help finance the new hospital facility, and Greenville Hospital System Board of Trustees announced tit would be named the Roger C. Peace Institute f o r Rehabilitative Medicine i n honor of the late Greenville publisher. On Nov. 14, Gov. Robert E. McNair and Dr. Billy Graham joined community, hospital and national officials in breaking ground for four new hospital projects on Grove Road site, which, when completed and fully equipped, will cost a total of $21,000,000. These facilities, expected to be completed by Spring, 1972, include: a 308-bed medicalsurgical hospital; the 50-bed Roger C. Peace Institute for Rehabilitative Medicine; a diagnostic and t r e a t m e n t center, which will furnish services to outpatients as well as for those who a r e hospitalized; and, a service area for heating and air-conditioning equipment I THE GREENVILLE January GREENVILLE NEWS January 7, 1970 THERAPY IN COLOR - Mrs. Richard V. Slaker, vice president of the Auxiliary to Greenville General Hospital, and Mrs. Frank Vaughan, right, auxiliary treasurer, present a color television to the Marshal] I. Pickens Hospital in behalf of the auxiliary. Mrs. David Roper, left, is nursing director at the hospital, and1 Thomas F . Hall II is administrator. Hospital officials feel the television will be of therapeutic value for in-patients as a supplemental activity to recreational and occupational therapy. Crescent Community Club has begun a library for patients. (Greenville News photo by Bennie J. Granger) PIEDMONT 2, 1970 First 1970 Arrival Little Nancy Tammette Seagraves was the first baby born in Greenville County ln 1970. The first child of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Seagraves, Rt. 1, Liberty, she was born at 12:24 a.m. on Jan. 1 at Greenville General Hospital. Nancy weighed in at 8 pounds, 9 1-2 ounces, and was 21 inches long. She was the first of six children born at the hospital on New Year's Day. Hospital authorities reported that the sexes were evenly divided, three boys and three girls. Nancy is pictured with her mother, Mrs. Seagraves. (Piedmont photo by James G. Wilson) imiiiiiiiii^________________________________________________________________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H 70-2 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE January 9, NEWS 1970 THE GREENVILLE January 13, Hospital Receives Fellowships Greenville General Hospital is one of two South Carolina institutions named to receive training fellowships from the South Carolina division of the American Cancer S o c i e t y professional educational committee. Three physicians from South Carolina were also presented ACS clinical fellowships. Greenville General was approved for a surgical fellowship for 1970-71. The fellowships carry stipends of $3,60P. ELECTED — Dr. Robert E. T o o m e y , director of the Greenville General Hospital System, will take office as president of the South Carolina Hospital Association at the organization's a n n u a l meeting in Columbia Jan. 23. THE GREENVILLE NEWS January 11, NEWS 1970 The Medical University of South Carolina at Charleston received f e l l o w s h i p s in! pathology and surgery. Physicians awarded clinical fellowships in pathology and surgery were Jane K. Upshur of Winston Salem, N. C, and H. Cooper Black Jr. of Orangeburg, both resident MD's at the Medical University. The third year advanced clinical fellowship was awarded to Fletcher M. Derrick Jr. at the Medical University where he is specializing in urology. 1970 Volunteers For Work At Mental Hospital Asked; Training Set Community r e s i d e n t s Subject will be the importance interested in doing volunteer of ' ' C o n fidentiality and work at the Marshall I. Individualty." The last of the Pickens Hospital, the mental three will be held Friday from health unit of the Greenville 2:304:30 p.m. with its subject Hospital System, are invited as "The Community Mental to participate in a series of Health Center and You." j orientation sessions t h i s Administrator Thomas F. week. Hall II says that the program will be conducted by Members The sessions are scheduled of the nursing staff. He Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. -couraged interested persons when the topic will be "An willing to do volunteer duty Overview of the Concept, of to attend the sessions. Mental Health and Mental The hospital, which opened Illness." The second session Thursday from 6-3 p.m. the in March, is the only one of its kind in South Carolina for the care of patients with emotional and mental illnesses, and its n e w programs are a t t r a c t i n g national attention. Dr. Roy Ellison is medical director, and Mrs. David Roper is director of nursing. 70-3 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE January NEWS THE GREENVILLE January 22, 1970 1 4 , 1 970 of detailed plamSng ana progranwning for the construction Thomas F. Hall of the mental health hospital. He later was appointed the hospital's first administrator. The Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, one of five of its kind in the nation designed especially for the care of patients with emotional and mental illnesses, was opened in March 1969. Thomas F. Hall II, administrator of the Marshall I. Pick- Because his interest in mental ens Hospital, has resigned to health increased during his asaccept a position with the South sociation with the planning for Carolina Department of Mental the mental health hospital in Health in Columbia as program Greenville, Hall said he decided analyst, Director Robert E. he wanted to make the field of Toomey of the Greenville Hos- ! mental health care his particupital System said Tuesday. His lar concern and career in the resignation becomes effective future. His father, a New York physician, was a psychiatrist. Jan. 31. As program analyst for the Designated as project man- State Department of Mental ager for the first hospital facil- Health Services, Hall will be inity on the new Grove Road volved with programs throughhealth campus, Hall was respon- out South Carolina. sible forjioordinating all phases Pinckney Heads New Hospital Executive Of Hospital Resigns Post THE GREENVILLE January 22, PIEDMONT : By MIRIAM GOODSPEED Frank D. Pinckney has taken lover the role of administrator of Marshall I. Pickens Hospital on Grove Road. He previously was administer of William G. Sirrine Hospital, 1200 Pendleton St. Greenville Hospital System director Robert E. Toomey announced the appointment of Pinckney to succeed Thomas F. Hall n at the new hospital on Grove Road. Hall recently resigned to become program analyst with the South Carolina Department of Mental Health. Pinckney, son of the Rt. Rev John A. Pinckney, Episcopal Bishop of the Upper Diocese of South and Mrs. P i n c k n e y , graduated from G r e e n v i l l e Senior High School. He received his undergraduate degree in Business Administration fromi the Citadel in 1961. He did post graduate studies at the University of Alabama Mediaal Center School for Continuing Education in Hospital Administration in Birmingham,! Ala., where he was the first recipient of the award for excellence presented by t h e school. Pinckney joined Greenville General Hospital in 1963, where he served in several administrative capacities before being n a m e d administrative assistant at Greenville General. He was project manager for the Greenville Hospital System's new chronic and convalescent center on Pendleton Street. When it opened in September, 1967, he was appointed administrator of the William G. Sirrine Hospital. NEWS 1970 He is a member of the American College of Hospital Administrators, The American Hospital Association, and the South Carolina Hospital Association. Active in community and civic affairs, he is a member of the Greenville Lions Club and closely associated with the eye conservation program. He is married to the former Carole Friend of Columbia, who is a graduate of the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing, , GIFT TO CHILDREN — The children's re-education center at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital receives a camera from. Greenville Junior Woman's Club. Mrs. E. Wayne Hunter makes the gift to Tom Kirby, principal at the center. The camera was purchased with proceeds from a club bazaar. (Greenville News photo by James G. Wilson) 70-4 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE NEWS January 1970 GREENVILLE r _r NEWS J a n u a r y 2 3 , 1970 Pinckney Is Appointed Hospital Administrator Frank D. Pinckney is the new administrator of Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. He succeeds Thomas F. Hall 33, who resigned recently to become program analyst with the South Carolina Department of Mental Health. Pinckney's appointment was announced by Robert E. Toomey, director of the Greenville Hospital System. He was administrator of William G. Sirrine Hospital on Pendleton Street before being named to head the Grove Road facility. Pinckney is a son of the Rt. Rev. John A. P i n c k n e y , DR. E. ARTHUR DRESKIN DR. WILLIAM R. DELOACHE New Medical Staff Officers Take Over Dr. E. Arthur Dreskin has Certified by the American assumed his responsibilities as Board of Pathology, Dr. Dreskin president of the medical staff of is engaged in the practice of the Greenville Hospital System, pathology in Greenville. In adalong with other officers elected dition to his work at Greenville for the year. He succeeds Dr. General, he is also consultant pathologist to St. F r a n c i s Lawson W. Stoneburner. Shriners' Hospital, and Dr. William R. DeLoaehe was Hospital, Easley Baptist Hospital. He elected vice president a n d the a Fellow of the American president-elect, the offices which is of Clinical Pathologists, Dr. Dreskin held last year, and Society he is serving as a Dr. Thomas Kenneth Howard is with which er of the, leg§l committee j the new secretary, succeeding *} committee, on Dr. Thomas Robert Wynne. | In addition to his position as Jth manpower >ttis' vaear. He director of laboratories a t a member of the'lBtftrtiatiorflfl Greenville General Hospital, Dr. cademy of Pathology. I Dreskin is identified with many Dr. DeLoaehe, a native of J medical and e d u c a t i o n a l Camden, did his undergraduate work at Furman and Vanderbilt programs. He heads the school of Universities, and he received medical technology at Greenville his medical degree from the General Hospital as director, Vanderbilt University Medical and he is also director of the School. S p e c i a l i z i n g «i school of certified laboratory pediatrics, he served his "inassistants, which is sponsored ternship at Vanderbilt and his by Greenville General and the residency in pediatrics a t Greenville Technical Education Bowman-Gray. Dr. Howard, a native of Center. Dr. Dreskin is professorial Greer, received his medical lecturer at Clemson University degree at the Medical College of and he is clinical associate South Carolina and interned at professor of pathology at the Greenville General Hospital. He in Medical University of South served his residency A n e s t h e s i o l o g y at Duke Carolina at Charleston. He formerly was with the University. Dr. Howard had University of Illinois College of earlier been engaged in private Medicine as instructor i n practice in general medicine in pathology and was a Fellow in Woodruff for seven years. He is Oncology, Cancer C l i n i c , now associated with the Greenville Anesthesia Professional there. Association. 70-5 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Episcopal bishop of the Upper Diocese of South Carolina, and Mrs. Pinckney. He is a graduate of Greenville High School and The Citadel, and he did post graduate studies; at the University of Alabama Medical Center School for Continuing Education in Hospital Administration. Pickney j o i n e d Greenville General Hospital in 1963. He has been administrative assistant at Greenville General and project manager for the s y s t e m ' s chronic and convalescent center on Pendleton Street. He was appointed administrator at William G. Sirrine Hospital in September 1967. He is a member of the American College of Hospital Administrators, The American Hospital Association, the South Carolina Hospital Association and the Greenville Lions Club. His wife, the former Carole Friend of Columbia, is a graduate of the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing. CHARLOTTE OBSERVER J»nu«ry 25. 1970 THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER Sun., January 25, 1970 SSO COME... WHERE THE ACTION IS IN NURSING EDUCATION G r e e n v i l l e G e n e r a l H o s p i t a l School of N u r s i n g 1. OFFERS a three-year diploma program accredited by the National League for Nursing. 2. PROVIDES sound education including classroom and clinical instruction at minimum cost in a modern, large, progressive hospital. 3. ENCOURAGES development of a well-rounded citizen and professional nurse in a varied environment of academic, athletic, cultural, religious and social activities, including Little Theatre, Community Concerts, Symphony, Art Museum and other programs. 4. REPRESENTS a focal point for nursing education in a thriving community and a dynamic regional hospital complex. Incorporating complete medical specialties and services. 5. AFFORDS nursing students with gracious living and attractive accommodations in a metropolitan area at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. O U R G R A D U A T E S ARE FULLY A N D C A P A B L Y PREPARED FOR THE STATE LICENSURE E X A M I N A T I O N T O BECOME REGISTERED N U R S E S . OUR GRADUATES ARE IN DEMAND Academic P r o g r a m : • All courses for first two terms taught at Furman University. • Second year includes courses in adult medical-surgical nursing, including Intensive Care and experience in the Operating Room; Mother and Infant Care, and Psychiatric Nursing. • Third year includes further medical-surgical nursing, Pediatrics and Advanced Nursing Care. Admission Requirements: • High School diploma. • Courses must include Chemistry, Biology, two years of Mathematics, and four years of general English. • Applicants must be g r a d u a t e s in upper half of their high school class. • Satisfactory Scholastic Aptitude Test score. • Personal interview. For further details and information, write: Wll,.ll»-_|i|.,.iil Registrar SCHOOL OF NURSING GREENVILLE GENERAL HOSPITAL 100 M a l l a r d Street Greenville, South Carolina 29601 70-6 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] 34S THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER Sun.. January 25, W 8 WESTERN PIEDMONT GreenviUe Hospital Head Says Health Field Growing COMMUNITY COLLEGE Hospitals and the health fields are confronted with urgent and continuing manpower needs, emphasizes Director Robert E. Toomey of the progressive and expanding Greenville Hospital System in Greenville, S. C , as he encourages young people in communities throughout the Carolinas to pursue their education to become physicians, health professionals, and nurses to meet present and future challenges. Dr. Toomey, who was installed as president of the South Carolina Hospital Association on Friday, noted that over 17,000 employes work in hospitals in the slate, serving the needs of patients. Of this number, there are 1,800 employes in the Greenville Hospital System, which has six hospital divisions serving Greenville County and the Piedmont Region. of Upper South Carolina. An additional 400 young people arc engaged in various educational programs associated with the hospital system. There are 2S5 physicians on the medical staff and 60 dentists on the dental staff in this growing medical center, which has received national attention for its innovations, in-depth planning, and comprehensive health care programming. Dr. "J*oomey said manpower requirements in the health field can be expected to i n c r e a s e substantially in Greenville County, in keeping with t h e "population exhospital expansion program planned or now under way. Four new hospital units — a 308-bed general medical-surgical hospital, a 50-bed rehabilitative hospital, a major diagnostic and treatment center, and a service unit — are being constructed on the Greenville Hospital System's new G r o v e Road health campus, covering 128 acres. Upon completion and being fully equipped, these new facilities will cost a total of $21 million. The mental health center, one of five of its kind in the nation designed especially for patients wilh emotional or mental illnesses, was named the Marshall I. Morganton, North Carolina Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools Offering a b r o a d range of College Transfer and Technical Programs leading to the Associate Degree, one year Vocational Diploma Programs, and extensive Adult and Continuing Education Courses. Technical Education Programs COLLEGE TRANSFER PROGRAMS Associate in Arts Degree in: T h e h e a r t o f a n y h o s p i t a l is f o u n d i n t h e p e o p l e w h o care f o r p e o p l e . Photographer Leon Carnes snapped this unposed photograph of Student Nurse V i c k i W a l l of G r e e r , S. C , a s t u d e n t i n t h e G r e e n v i U e G e n e r a l H o s p i t a l S c h o o l o f N u r s i n g , as she gave compassionate tenderness and w a r m t h t o a young pediatric patient. Dr. Toomey also anticipates the n e e d s for medically trained technical personnel to average about 900 by 1975. Critical shortages of these one and two year educated and trained technicians will Pickens Hospital, in honor of the vice chairman of The Duke Endowment. It w a s completed and opened in March. 1969. This hespifal was constructed and ss«iKS&.-aUf _ft_.,.,k .at cilities of the hospital system, located in Greenville. Greer and Simpsonville, are being enlarged and improved. Shortages which exist now in personnel will become inlesfified, Dr. Toomey said. NEED In Greenville County alone, the anticipated needs through 1975 are for some 300 professionals: physicians, dentists, ADA dietitians, medical technologists, pharmacists, physical therapists, recreational therapists, occupational therapists, medical and psychiatric social workers, and rehabilitative counselors, as well as those in the broad field of professional nursing. Pre-Agriculture Pre-Buslness Administration Pre-Engineering Pre-Forestry Pre-LiberalArts Pre-Medical • Pre-Science. Pre-Teaching Associate in Science Degree in: ' ' Pre-Engineering Pre-Medical Pre-Science Centered in a progressive, metropolitan center at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the School of Nursing offers academic, athletic, cultural, social, and religious opportunities for the development of the well rounded citizen and the capable professional nurse. QlamiHen ifflilttanj Aratomg fflamJi.it. 0_tutf| (Hamlina 2902a VOCATIONAL DIPLOMA PROGRAMS One Year ADULT AND CONTINUING EDUCATION CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS A d u l t Basic Education (Gr. 1 -8) High School Completion Vocational U p g r a d i n g Avocafional a n d Personal D e v e l o p m e n t Special Extension M a n p o w e r Development a n d Training HAMPTON INSTITUTE A fully accredited co-educational college of Liberal Arts a n d Sciences, a n d a g r a d u a t e school offering degrees in Secondary Education, Elementary Education, Administration a n d Supervision, a n d Guidance. To Challenge the Challenging Youth and Changing Times Today: a variety of courses of instruction in the Division of Humanities, Social Sciences, Education, Natural Science a n d Mathematics, w i t h a major in over 24 different areas of study. Science Building — one of five m o d e r n , recently constructed air-conditioned buildings — others being Nursing Education a n d Home Economics Center, Physical Education, Social Sciences, Mass M e d i a Arts Center — N e w $18 million construction p r o g r a m underway. A Boy's M i l i t a r y Academy Grades 8 t h r o u g h 12 A Modem Educational Plant with the Best in Facilities. T u i t i o n , Room and Board $ 1 3 7 5 Plus U n i f o r m s • • • * • f o r c a t a l o g please w r i t e : Col. L a n n i n g P. (For Further Information Write: The Admissions Office, Risher Hampton Institute) Hampton, Virginia 23368 BoxO. C a m d e n , S. C. - Automotive Mechanics Mechanical Drafting Medical Laboratory Assistant FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT Mrs. Nancy R. Moore, Director Student Personnel Services Western Piedmont Community College M o r g a n t o n , North Carolina 28655 Telephone: 437-8688 unless today s youth becomes aware of the increased demands and programs available to them, he said. Seventy-two seniors graduated in. the September class, which was the second largest group ever to receive diplomas. By the end of December, 1.373 had graduated from the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing. Associate in A p p l i e d Science Degree i n : . Accounting Business Administration Secretarial — Executive Secretarial — Legal Secretarial — M e d i c a l Industrial Engineering Technology Mental Health Technology Medical Office Assistant Nursing (Registered) Police Science Technology 70-7 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE February 1, NEWS 1970 'Smile Power' Is The Goal Kids Need Brownie Decay Bug Shovel By GRETCHEN ROBINSON News Staff Writer Three year olds who can't identify a brownie decay bug shovel could be in big trouble later on, a local pedodontist said. Or their teeth are apt to be. Pedodontist—that's a dentist specializing in treatment of teeth of youngsters from birth to 19 years of age. It's not the generation gap or the credibility gap that concerns dentists, but the youngsters who are apt to become members of the toothless generation. Dr. J. Thomas Atkinson, a Greenville pedodontist and chairman of National Children's Dental H e a l t h Week, said the observance Feb. 1-7 is to encourage regular dental health habits in children and adults. Decay is more prevalent in those three to 14 years old, with the worst case showing up in the teenage bracket, Atkinson said. It's the preoccupation during the teens and the "junk" eating that causes more decay in this age group, he said. Tooth straightening a n d decay control at this stage and in early childhood can prevent gum problems and possible loss of teeth later, he said. It's been a l o n g - h e l d misconception that old age means loss of teeth. "Today's dentists are. concerned w i t h preventive dentistry," Atkinson s a i d , Joyce Marie Johnson, 5, finds out dental work is not so bad after, all as she is treated at the Greenville General Hospital dental clinic by Dr. P. L. Bauknight Jr., with the help of Mrs. Buena M. Graves, LPN. At right, an 18-vcar-old cerebral palsy victim makes a dental visit "and to me dentures are the worst restorative thing we have in dentistry and are more often worn in the back pocket than they are in the mouth. There Is no reason for anyone losing all his teeth unless by some b i z a r r e disease." In fact, most teeth can be saved with modern treatment, the dentist said. He pointed out that a tooth kept moist after b e i n g knocked out by accident can be replanted as long as three days later. The "smile power" urged by the American D e n t a l Association during d e n t a l week is not just a front. Atkinson contends that the frightful experience associated with visits to the dentist office is not true. Dentists are no longer the "tooth drawers" of years ago as t o o t h extraction today is considered a last resort by most. A look into a dentist's office today reveals a reclining chair designed to fit the patient's height; modern high speed streamlined equipment for removal of decay, x - r a y equipment for detection of abnormalities unseen by the dentist and a choice of pain killers. Use of audio visual aids assists dentists with child and parent orientation to e a r l y oral hygienic t r a i n i n g . Childhood introduction to the dentist office includes a get acquainted session with equipment where he learns in a hospital operating room for such special patient cases. Dr. J. Thomas Atkinson, pedodonist, usually completes these fillings and crowns in his office for regular patients. (Greenville News photos by James G. Wilson) 70-8 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] about the brownie decay bug shovel—a drill. Dental research in recent years has produced plastic coating to prevent tooth decay in children, an adhesive spray to stabilize transplanted oral soft tissue grafts as well as adhesives for d e n t u r e s , enzymes that retard formation of tartar and mouth protectors for athletes. Though there is a shortage of dentists and even fewer specialists, Atkinson said, the national average is about 4,000 patients to each dentist. However, one dentist can treat 2,000 patients, he added. Teeth were intended to last a lifetime, Atkinson said, and withstand as much as 300 pounds of pressure from jaws while chewing a carrot or apple. While soft foods and too many sweets, e s p e c i a l l y c a r b o h ydrates, are the primary causes of t o o t h decay, he said most decay can be prevented by brushing, using dental floss, stimulating gums and visiting the dentist regularly. Dr. Richard L. Alpert, president of the Greenville Dental S o c i e t y comprising more than 70 dentists, called the classic concept of two visits per year a n o t h e r misconception. "Some people need more than that while others wait until they feel pain which is a sign of an advanced case," he said. "The future lies in preventive means at our disposal to control tooth decay and gum periodontal disease. The major cause of tooth loss is pyorrhea but dental help in early life can eliminate prob- lems later. And what cannot be done in routine chair care by the p e d o d ontist, periodontist, orthodontist, oral surgeon or endodontist can be accomplished while the patien 1 is asleep. Special oral surgery often is prescribed for mentally or physically handicapped patients in a hospital operating room, but even these patients are assured a safe and unfrightful dental visit, said Atkinson, who performs an average of two such operations per month. "Most pedodontists feel that gas use in the office is not the safest for the child because of the impossibility of making all n e c e s s a r ; : checks while operating," the dentist said. The dentist uses a unit of portable equipment for denta i service in a hospital operating room. The same service i s available at the dental health clime at Greenville General Hospital where children and adults of low income families receive dental care for a small fee. The clinic open four days each week is sponsored by the Greenville Sertoma Club and has been in operation since May 1959. The club purchased equipment and the hospital p r o v i d e s supplies. Area d e n t i s t s donate approximately 200 hours per year to the clinic and are on night call. The clinic recorded 677 visits in the pedodontic clinic from October 1968 to November 1969. During the same period there were 529 visits in the adult dental clinic. THE GREENVILLE NEWS BRAVES CARAVAN HERE—The annual Atlanta Braves Caravan visited hospitals and facilities here Thursday concluding their good-will trips to 25 towns and cities before spring training opens. They are from left to right: relief specialist Hoyt Wilhelm, pitcher Ron Reed, February 6, 1970 utility outfielder M i k e Lum, shortstop Sonny Jackson and San Francisco Giants' catcher Dick Dietz. Chief Nok-A-Homa, the Braves' mascot, is in the foreground. (Greenville News p h o t o by Bennie J. Granger) Braves Caravan Comes To City "I came to Atlanta around Series. Cleveland had set the By DAVID HOWELL September 7th or 8th," he record for most wins in a season News Sports Writer recalled, "after having been His Atlanta Braves team- with the California Angels. When and we weren't even supposed mates call him, "The Kaiser," I came to Atlanta, only two to be on the same field with but relief specialist H o y t games separated the first five them. But we won the Series! Wilhelm refers to .his fellow!jar six teams in the division . . . everything we did was players as "kids" and _ keeps jgjjjj yj e B r a v e s w e r e a g a m e right." Wilhelm, who's been pitching throwing those d i f f l c u l t | out of first place. 18 years, gave his views on knuckleballs. "I had only been with the the„ .Braves' chances t h i s Wilhelm, the 4 6 - y e a r - o I d Braves a month when we played season. pitcher who grew up in Hun- the Mets for the pennant. When "I'd say first that the Braves tersville, N.C, and now makes you've got to face Seaver were one of five teams with his home in Columbus, Ga., was (Tom), Koosman, (Jerry) Gen- a chance to win everything with in the Braves Caravan, which try (Gary) that's quite a pitch- two games to go last year," toured hospitals and facilities ng rotation. But I figured if we he added. "I think the Braves here Thursday. had scored the runs off them have an excellent chance to win Also in the caravan were 0631611 ^ M e t S ; l t this year. They certainly fi^ shortstop Sonny Jackson, utility for t h f p e i t tojmgtewrd outfielder Mike Lum, 18-game "It L T l e the Mets M i to' x1J ^K ^m Um b e " " " ^ good winning pitcher Ron Reed, their one of those years," related I x m mascot, Chief Nok-A-Homa, and Wilhelm of the eventual World ^ radio Braves' announcer Milo Champions. "They had a good club, great pitching and went Hamilton. In last season's drive for the on to beat BaltimOTe four games National League p e n n a n t , out of five in the World Series. Wilhelm's experience was one "I remember one of those of the factors which enabled kinds of Series, too. I was with the Braves to win the Western the Giants (New York) and we played Cleveland in the '54 Division. 70-9 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] ".This division alignment they set up last year was one of Ihe best things in baseball. Except for Baltimore and Minnesota in the American League there was exciting baseball and we clinched our division with one game to go. The fans liked it." Wilhelm was asked who made a relief pitcher out of him and he answered, "It was Leo Durocher. With the success I've had, I can't say that I knock it." Then Wilhelm, one of the few masters of the knucklelball, talked of the complicated pitch. "A lot of guys ask me about it," he disclosed. "And as soon as I show them how to hold the ball correctly they say, 'well, that's not for me.' The major league scouts nowadays are looking for boys who can throw hard or can't. "They can teach them the change, curve, slider. But with the knuckleball, you have to have the knack. Just everybody can't throw it. "That's probably the reason there aren't more players using it. First you have to have the knack and you start from there." Wilhelm, who says "you're not as old as you feel these days," watches his physical condition and plans to keep pitching as long as he can. Already a member of the North Carolina Hall of Fame, he chuckles, "Yes, I've seen a lot of players come and go, but I keep hanging in there." Wilhelm has pitched in more games than any other major leaguer. He broke Cy Young's record and has hurled 989 games and needs 11 to break the 1,000 mark. "The Kaiser," was born to play baseball. THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT February 6 1970 It Was Fun Day, J Yet Misty-Eye By BOB UNGERICHT It was supposed to be a fun-fifled afternoon—and it was— but there were a few misty eyes as members of the Atlanta Braves Caravan toured local hospitals and plants yesterday afternoon. One of the biggest attractions of such tours are local hospitals where the baseball stars and club officials meet and talk with avid baseball fans, mostly youngsters who are unable to get out of their beds. \ were much impressed with the Such was the case both at i facilities and work being done Shriner's Hospital and Green- and remarked later how much ville General Hospital where the hope they held for the speedy players spent most of their sign- recovery for each of tbe pai ing autographs and trying to tients, cheer up the youngsters with Next stop was a tour of Union Bleachery where the players] baseball talk. were given a personally con-i ONE OF THE biggest hits ducted tour by Bill Horton of of the tour was the Braves the company's personnel departmascot, Chief Nok-A-Homa, who ment. prior to each game does a vic- During the hour-long tour the tory dance on the mound as Braves met and shook hands he leads the Braves from the with many of the workers, sign dugout, then departs for his tee- ed autographed p i c t u r e s , pee where every Atlanta home baseball gloves and baseballs | rum brings him out for another for plant personnel. Another big greeting was victory dance. The chief took a lot of kidding received at Greenville General on the tour from Milo Hamilton, Hospital where Elliott Taylor radio and television voice of had everything set. A reception the Braves, in regani to me was held in the cafeteria for and younger patients who day last year when things got wadult so hot the Chief's tee-pee went; ^ e a b l e t o a t t e n d Here, again, Hamilton inup in Smoke troduced players and had Described by Braves officials the Chief the do his victory dance as one of the most successful for the youngsters. Following of their 25 tours this season the reception the players the Greenville trip started with taken to the children's were a luncheon at Wade Hampton where they visited those wing! who High School cafeteria followed by an assembly program that were unable to get out of bed. drew some 800 students. A PRESS CONFERENCE and Under the e x c e l l e n t dinner at Ye Olde Fireplace supervision of Athletic Director closed out the day's program and Football Coach Bill Phillips, where again H a m i l t o n inand basketball coach Johnny troduced the players. Ross, the Wade Hampton part It was here where he told of the tour was a real highlight a little of his own personal of the day. background and remarked about During the short program doing "remote" broadcasts from Hamilton described a little of Iowa some 22 years ago with the Braves dash for the Western Charlie Spivak. Division championship last year, During their nine-hour visit hurriedly and humorously pass- here the Braves met, talked ed over their defeat by the with, and signed autographs for New York Mets in the playoffs, over 2.000 baseball fans. They the told about the Braves hopes were very well r e c e i v e d for 1970. wherever they went which He introduced each member prompted club officials to say, on the tour and told a little "This was one of the best tours of each players background and we've had this season." the duties of club personnel. It was the final tour during FROM WADE HAMPTON the a month of hectic visits to some tour progressed to Shriners 25 cities in the Southeast and Hospital where the players met now gives them a short rest1 and talked with just about every period before they head for West youngster jn the building. All Palm Beach, Fla., and spring training late this month. CHIEF NOK-A-HOMA chats with youngster at Shriners Hospital during the Atlanta Braves Caravan tour of Greenville here yesterday. (Piedmont ' sports photo by James G. Wilson) GREENVILLE'S Dickie Dietz, left, catcher for the San Francisco Giants, and Ron Reed,. pitcher for the Atlanta Braves, get together for a "serious chat" during visit by the Braves Caravan to Greenville yesterday. Last season Dietz hit a line drive off the knee of Reed which put the Atlanta player out of action for a couple of weeks and Reed made Dietz promise he wouldn't do it again. (Piedmont sports photo by Bennie J. Granger) 70-10 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] MEMBERS OF THE Atlanta. Braves Caravan (talked to, signer-autographs, and passed out-pic*_ures to oyjMI ifdseball fans during their. »inp^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • " l e ' y e s t e r d a y . At left ____________________________¥ ,-.um a n d Kilo* Hatfri ...• i '- ' lea'chery. m &$ on Reftti and Lum cheer up a sick ypi 1 'i?•' Geueiate^psprt-al, -. HSmflton and Hoyt W ' 7T girl at the local hospiUif (Pied.' u " Bennie J. Granger)** mu 70-11 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Variety Adds Spice To Student Nurses' Training It all begins In the classroom. This Is where the facts are learned for almost Immediate practical application. These junior student nurses (Just by coincidence all married) at GreenvUle ' General Hospital School of Nursing are being taught Miss Ginny Bagwell of Clinton, a senior student nurse, assists Mrs. Ora Dyer Shultz of Greenville with the lift she uses because of a fractured leg. The three months studrnt nurses spend In the maternity ward are possibly the highlight of the three-year training for those at GreenvUle General Hospital. When working with the mothers and babies, the students wear sterilized white gowns recovery room procedure by Mrs. Carl Stanley, recovery room Instructor. Students are, left lo right, Mrs. Bob (Diane) Golns, Mrs. Don (Pat) Tiliotson, Mrs. Ben (Suzanne) Compton and Mrs. Joe (Frances) Garrett. Students work with every age In their process of becoming a graduate registered nurse. instead of their smart navy blue uniforms. Here. Miss Cynthia Good, a Greenville junior, places David Anthony Baker in the arms ot his mother, Mrs. Joseph E. Baker of 17 Argonne Drive. The baby was born Jan. 31. King student nurses always enjoy their lime spent on the pediatrics ward. Here, they work with parents and patients in seeing lhat the small ones are happy and comfortable. Miss Caroline Boggs of Greenville, a senior, enjoys playing with Kimberly Kay Wilson. 3-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilson of 37 N. Estate Drive. Kim Is being treated for asthma and looks forward to the times she Is out of the croupette. By MARIE M. PEDES Piedmont Women's Pages Most students have to wait until their education is completed to put to use the knowledge they Bain from books in the classroom. Bill student nurses at GreenviUe General Hospital School of Nursing begin practicing nursing arts during the first year of the three-year training period (for which they will receive a diploma. The local school is the only nationally accredited hospital diploma school of nursing in South Carolina). A« well as the variety ln learning through studying and practicing, the students have changes of scenes for their education experience. During the first year, the students go to the Furman University campus by bus to study the science courses and do their lab work. Tbe second year sees them off to Columbia to the State Hospital where they receive psychiatric clinical experience for 12 weeks. Students also go to the Veterans Administration Hospital in Oteen. N.C, for four weeks of learning to care for patients suffering from tuberculosis and/or long term illness. There Is much satisfaction to be hod by choosing nursing as a career. Anyone with a love for people finds pleasure In being able to relieve pain and make the ill more com rortable. It Is also rewarding financially. Entrance requirements are: high school diploma with credits in chemistry, biology, general English (4 years) and mathematics (2 years): students must be graduates In the upper half of their high school class, possess satisfactory scholastic aptitude test scores and have a personal Interview before matriculating. There is a residence for the students with large living room on the first floor and recreation facilities ln the basement. The students have a say in their regulations and policies as the student body Is guided by a student government association and faculty advisors. The nurses-to-be participate In the cultural activities of the area through tickets available for the Little Theater, Bob Jones University and Furman University programs, t h e Greenvilla Symphony, and other activities. In addition to the Inside recreational room, there ls a tennis o. basketball court adjoining tbe residence and swimming privileges are given students at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. There are counselors for personal, social or educational problems and good health Is promoted by the health nurse through programs worked out for the Individual girl and the hospital provides hospitalization insurance for each student. There are six holidays each year, a six weeks vacation during the first year and four weeks each for the next two years of training. Yes, there are many advantages to spending three years where a sound, well rounded education, including classroom and clinical Instruction, can be bad at a minimum cost (the three years cost about the same for tuition and board as one year at most colleges). There are scholarships available and loans through the federal government for up to $1,000 annually, with only half the amount being repaid if the student stays In nursing for five years. There are the Army and Navy programs for senior students with the stipulation that the student agrees to serve two years as an officer ln the desired branch. Many of the local graduates have used this latter program and have even made the mUltary a career, with one becoming a lieutenant colonel in the army and another a chief nurse ln the Air Corps ln earlier days. Others are getting or already have their Ph.D. degrees with university teaching as the goalGraduates from General have no problem finding positions. There ls need now for more nurses here and will be a greater need when the hospital complex ls completed. For further Information write the Registrar, School of Nursing. GreenvUle General Hospital, GreenviUe, S.C. 29601. All work and no play—and there certainly seem to be no dull girls among the busy student nurses at General Hospital. There Is a large recreation room and some TV rooms for the use of the students. Here, four of them enjoy a game of bridge. Left to right are Miss Tara Eaton of Augusta, Miss Jenny Scarborough of Timmonsviltc. Miss Delores Able of Union and Miss Linda Fanning of Neeses. Photos by James G. Wilson 70-12 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE G R E E N V I L L E NEWS F e b r u a r y 6, 1970 THE Coronary Care Unit Saves Many Lives, Doctor Says The four beds in Greenville the nurse if the heartbeat inGeneral Hospital's c o r o n a r y creases or decreases beyond a care unit cost approximately predetermined level, and also defibrillator. $10,000 each to equip but they a The recorder also has a save the lives of many ex- memory loop which allows the periencing cardiac arrest, Dr. nurse to stop the unit and imA. G. Meaking, specialist in in- mediately play back the record ternal medicine and cardiology, of the patient's heart beats during the preceeding 20-second said Thursday. He was addressing t h e period; extremely important Pleasantburg Rotary Club to sometimes in determining what call attention to National Heart treatment should be administered, he said. Month during February. Meakin said the man on the He said that during the past street with simple training can, six month period only 11 of save by prompt action the lives 168 patients have died in the of about five per cent of the GCU and estimated that as individuals suffering cardiac ar- many as 50 per cent might rest, that trained personnel can have died if one was not save about 15 per cent without available. special equipment and -that 38 Following his talk h e per cent of the pateints can answered several questions. be saved if they have the attack He said that in his opinion, while in the coronary care because smoking causes a constriction of blood vessels and unit. The unit is particularly ef- lowers the temperature of bodily fective in the many cases where extrerneties, and causes the only one chamber of the heart heart to have to work harder, is activated or where the entire it should be avoided by those heart fitatflates of quivers with a heart condition. because electrical signals which Those suffering from angina ususally activate all h e a r t (pain of the heart muscles) may chambers aren't being transmit- have the pain brought on by ted by the body through normal watching an exciting ball game; arguing or by exercising, he channels, he explained. • He said that speed of treat- said, stressing that any one of ment is essential in most cases these things can bring on an if the life of the patient is attack if one uses up his reserve of physical energy. to be saved. "In the coronary care unit, Commenting on the need for the nurse must have the authori- rest when heart muscles have ty to administer a shock to been damaged he said: the patient which will restart "K you could put the heart the heart; by the time she called muscle in a cast like you can the doctor it would usually be a broken arm you could cure it verv well." too late," he stressed. He said equipment in the unit includes an oscilloscope, a tacometer, an automatic rate recorder^ which is set to signal GREENVILLE PIEDMONT F e b r u a r y 1Z, 1970 Letter To The Piedmont Need For Nurses Mrs. Marie Peden, The Piedmont The article about our students and the program was very well expressed. We do thank you for presenting the need for more nurses to the public and showing students' activities in the actual hospital area. We believe this will call attention to our school. t MISS MARIE A. WARNCKE Director of Education Greenville Hospital System THE GREENVILLE February 1970 Duke Endowment $61,221 To Be Paid To 9 County Centers Duke E n d o w m e n t ap- and as reimbursement for propriations amounting to participation in H o s p i t a l $61,221.13 will be paid to five Administrative Services (HAS) hospitals and four child-care of Chicago, III, and Professional Institutions in Greenville County, Activity Study (PAS) of the it was announced Wednesday by ^Commission on Professional and James R. Felts Jr., executive Hospital Activities of Ann Arbor, director of the Hospital and -Mich. Child Care sections of the en- • Since 1966, these services, dowment. which compile and distribute The. hospitals will receive comparative financial a n d checks based on $1 a day for statistical information on a cureach day of free care in the rent monthly basis, have been fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1969, made available to hospitals assisted by the Endowment, which reimburses them for entire cost uMil September o: this year when it will beg: to withdraw at the rate of li per cent a year until the co; is shared equally by the endowment and the hospitals. ' Hospitals in Greenville County being paid include Greenville THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT General Hospital, $ 2 3 , 7 8 2 ; Marshall 1. Pickens Hospital $78; Stroud Memorial Hospital, F e b r u a r y 19, 1970 Marietta, $365; Allen Bennett Memorial, Greer, $1,12 6; Hillcrest Hospital, Simpsonville, $40. The four child care institutions $23,782; Marshall I. Pickens Service of 1 Greenville County, being paid were S h r i n e r s ' Hospital, $78; Stroud Memorial $6j$95; and Boys Home of the Hospital for Crippled Children Hospital, Marietta, $365; Allen Sotith, $3,95,8. $19,290; Church of God Home Bennett Memorial!, G r e e r , for Children, Mauldin, $5,586 $1,126; Hillcrest Hospital, Family and Children Service Simpsonville, $40. Greenville County, $6,995.68; an Boys Home of the SoutI The four child care institutions $3,958.45. receiving appropriations a r e Shriners' Hospital for Crippled Children, $19,290; Church of God Home for Children, Mauldin, $5,586; Family and Children 70-13 Greenville Centers Get Duke Grants Five hospitals and four child care institutions in Greenville County will receive D u k e E n d o w m e n t appropriations amounting to $61,221, James R. Felts, Jr., executive director of the hospital and child care sections of the endowment announced Wednesday. Hospitals in Greenville County given appropriations i n c l u d e Greenville General Hospital, 19, NEWS [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT February 2 1 , 1970 Student Nurses Tape Public Service Spots "Nursing is where the action Is" a young voice assures its radio listener. This is one case where the announcer should know. She really is a student nurse, and she's speaking from first hand experience. A group of student nurses from the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing have made radio public service spot announcements aimed at their contemporaries on t h e advantages and challenges offered in the field of nursing. The girls wrote and taped the spots in a contest conducted by the School of.(Nursing and the hospital's Office of Public Affairs. An impartial par/el of judges declared the students' spots "original, refreshing, appealing and, in many c a s e s , "excellent." 'ule Cleveland Ferguson, office manager for WFBC and Jeff Fields, staff announcer and free lance writer praised the students' efforts and declared "all of the entries were good." It was difficult to single out three for prizes, they reported. Miss Nancy Chase won first prize, Miss Brenda McCall, second, and Miss Judy Osborne, third. Other entrants were Miss Linda Weist, Miss Gail Moore, Miss Jan Hopkins, Miss J a n i c e Hawkins, Miss Rebecca Steele, Miss Teresa Orr, Miss Malinda M u r p h r e e , Miss LeJune Dunaway, and Miss S u s a n Rickenbaker. All applicants were invited to take part in a taping session by Billy Powell, program director for WFBC radio. The tapes are being sent to .selected radio stations in the Carolinas for airing as public service announcements. Public Service Spot Winners Student nurses recently competed in a special radio public service spot contest which was conducted by the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing and Office of Public Affairs. Among the winners who recorded their entries at WFBC studios were, stand- 70-14 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] ing, left to1 right, Brenda McCall, second prize and Judy Osborne, third prize. First prize winners, Nancy Chase is shown seated with Billy Powell, WFBC program director, who helped the girls with their recordings. (Piedmont Photo) THE GREENVILLE February 23, NEWS 1970 BLOOD DONORS—PFC. James Terry Tranham was one of more than 30 Marines from the local Detachment Ammunition Company who gave blood Sunday at Greenville General Hospital's blood bank laboratory, for use in the Shriners' Hospital program. Mrs. Anthony L. Neves, donor room supervisor, took the blood as (left to right) C. W. Stepp, Lt. of the hospital activities unit of the Hejaz Temple; 1st. Sgt. L. B. Hyatt and Capt. V. C. Bryan looked on. irby Tells Club Of Hospital Thomas Kirby, principal of Children's R e - e d u c a t i o n Center of the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, was guest speaker for the Greenville Junior Woman's Club at the February meeting on the new Mental Health Center. Mr. Kirby thanked the club for the camera presented the chiidrens division and talked about the emotionally disturbed children's program, saying: the program is'for children who can profit from a short term e d u c a t i o n a l re-adjustment; the average stay for a child at the school is 6 to 7 months, with a formal follow-up for a one year period on the individual, the family, and his readjustment to community schools; and the object of the program is to return the person to a normal and productive life, Mrs. T. D. Clemehi president, welcomed $frs. F . G. Blair and Mrs.-Jaiaes M. Huffman as guests. The fine arts department 'announced that entries for the Hallmark Art Contest are on display at the Pleasantburg branch of Peoples National Bank. Mrs. C l e m e n t announced thai Mrs._ Clark E. Westbury will serve as home l i f e WiUiam S. Jackson. The bridge benefit will take chairman. The club won the National Foundation March of place March 4 at F i r s t Dimes award for outstanding Federal on Wade Hampton. volunteer service during the Reservations may be made by contacting Mrs. WiUiam recent Mothers March. Mrs. John A. Carson Jr., -S. Jackson at 244-2583. Greenville County March of Dimes chairman, presented a plaque to the club from the national f o u n d a t i o n for outstanding service and also certificates to each member. Mrs. W. Lynn Smith, public THE GREENVILLE affairs chairman, t h a n k e d members for participating in F e b r u a r y 2 3 , 1970 the recent eye s c r e e n i n g classes. The club >&)ted to contribute $100 to "ttf-«Greenville Association for - p c t a.r d e d Children from the-forthcoming bridge benefit. This will be •reative equipment for the Day Care Center. The elub will also provide t h r e e c a m p e r s h i p s to Camp Spearhead. 'ihe following were named to the nominating committee: Peter D. B y 1 e n d a . rman, Mrs. Carson, Mrs. Ray C. Ballew, Mrs. James L. Townsend Jr. and Mrs. 70-15 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] PIEDMONT GREENVILLE February Candy Stripers at Greenville General Hospital will have a talent show Saturday at 8 p.m. a t GreenvUle High School. One of the acts will be by the i'Tdget Midgets." shown _above. left_to GREENVILLE February 28, GREENVILLE March PIEDMONT 1, NEWS 1970 Influenza 1970 Hospital Visiting Discouraged Architects Here Receive Awards Two Greenville architectural firms, J. E. Sirrine Co., and J. Harold Mack Architectural Firm, received awards at the annual Winter Awards Banquet of the S. C. Chapter of the American Institute of Architecture in Clemson Friday night. Sirrine Co. was awarded for the design of the Greenville News-Piedmont Building and the Clemson University Coliseum. The design of the Marshall Pickens Mental Health Center on Grove Road in Greenville produced an award for the J. Harold M a c k Architectural Firm. The awards were sponsored by the American Institute of Architects, which selected 32 South Carolina designs from the 33 state entries. 1970 right, Donna Stepp, Jane Godfrey, Vickie Young and Debbie ©rambles, who will do a comedy dance routine. (Piedmont photo) THE THE 26, PIEDMONT 70-16 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Greenville General Hospital officials again have urged a curtailment of visitation at the hospital this Sunday. A spokesman for the hospital said that numerous cases of influenza have occurred among patients being treated for other ailments. He said that the influenza has not reached an epidemic proportion but is worse at this time of the year. The official said thfit the thousands of visitors at the hospital under the present conditions would only expose patients to other illnesses, and he urged that visitors refrain where circumstances permit. THE GREENVILLE NEWS March 1, 1970 TEC Health Division Offers New Courses Dietary Technician and Inhalation Therapy, two new two-year courses, will be offered in September in the Health Career Division at Greenville Technical Education Center. The dietary t e c h n i c i a n students will receive training in a program of basic sciences and didactic portions including actual food preparation, nutrition and menu p 1 a n n i n g s , purchasing, dining room operation, supervision and training techniques and catering. The curriculum will b e supervised by the D i e t a r y Technology Advisory Committee at TEC. Members include W. W. Crittenden, administrator at Oakmont Nursing Center; Sister Catherine E h i e n , registered dietitian at St. Francis Hospital; Mrs. Virginia Fowler, registered dietitian at Greenville General Hospital; Miss Mattie Reavis, registered dietitian at Anderson Memorial Hospital; Mrs. Marcelle S c o g i n , registered dietitian at Greenville General Hospital; and Mrs. Dorothy C. Swift, registered dietitian at Greenville County H e a l t h Department. Students in inhalation therapy will be instructed in clinical THE practice, utilization of apparatus and techniques with emphasis on the anatomical and physiological aspects of various procedures, airway managements, resuscitation and spirometry, clinical application, continuation of disease management and understanding of disease processes related to surgical procedures and longstanding disease. The Inhalation T h e r a p y Advisory Committee at TEC are Dr. William' Pryor, Dr. John D. Ashmore, Dr. William E. Bomar, Dr. Eugene Cornett, Miss Joyce Crowe and Benny Waters. GREENVILLE March The dietary technician and the inhalation therapy courses were added based on surveys on the six Appalachian counties in South Carolina to determine needs in these areas. There are no programs in the state for dietiry technicians and the inhalation course is being offered at Columbia at Richland TEC. Applications are now being taken for the courses. Further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Doris Kunz, counselor, Health Career Center at TEC. PIEDMONT 4, 1970 Drilling Rigs Make Interesting Picture This is not a double exposure nor two separate photographic frames. The unusual effect is the r e sult of t h e fact t h a t two drilling rigs were in operation a t the same time on the site of Greenville Medical Center on Grove Road. Piedmont photo- grapher Fletcher W. Ross photographed the rigs from t h e vantage point of t h e brick-colonhaded walkway a t Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, and this interesting picture was the result. 70-17 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS March o c a I II/urde n o m i n a t e d ^ r o r 4, 1970 : I l a t i o n a l ^ r r tonoi A Greenville nurse, con- ! If selected as the national cerned with improving the •winner among the 39 state ;finalists, she will be eligible quality of life in South for a $2,000 award from ScherCarolina, has been honored ing Corp., a pharmaceutical by the American Nurses' company. Half of this award Association for making an would be contributed by her outstanding contribution to the jto a Greenville community project in which she is incommunity. volved. Mrs. Thurston H. Nicholson of Paris Mountain has been selected to represent South Carolina as one of the finalists from 39 states in a nationwide "Be-Involved Nurse Search." Honors went to registered nurses who have been actively participating in raising the level of social or health services in t h e i r communities. Mrs. Nicholson, a charge instructor in maternal and infant care at G r e e n v i l l e , General Hospital School of Nursing, has been president of the Community Council and PTA. In addition, she has been | a board member of the Greeniville Women's Club, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Family I Service Association, Cancer Society, Heart Association and Phyllis Wheatley Association. Mrs. N i c h o l s o n was nominated by the S o u t h Carolina State Nurses Association in Columbia. She has worked to develop educational programs on the importance of prenatal care, aided the poor,helped to raise funds for the United Fund and YMCA, spoken about community affairs and health subjects at club meetings, and THE Health Care Meeting Set In Greenville Health care providers and planners will meet in Greenville Wednesday for a d a y - l o n g seminar on the state of health care planning in S o u t h Carolina. The meeting at the Holiday Inn on Mauldin Road a t Interstate 85, is sponsored by the State Board of Health, the S. C. Appalachian Region Health Policy and Planning Council and Blue Cross-Blue Shield, and is the first of three such seminars scheduled across the state. Mrs. Nicholson, who serves as chairman of the Greenville County Health Planning Council, also has an interest in establishing a t w o - p a r t y [political systeiri hi South Carolina."She Was a candidate for the House of Representatives in 1967 on t h e Republican ticket. I A motion picture documentary on ANA's national winner and.five finalist^ is being produced by 'Sobering. -'Roth the cash award, and the,film will be presented >at the ANA's biennial convention at Miami Beach in May 1970. MRS. NICHOLSON directed a polio immunization program in the county. GREENVILLE March 4, All registered n u r s e s , including the 207,000 members of the ANA, were eligible for nomination in the search for exceptional p e r f o r m a n c e either on-the-job or after work.t The winner will be selected by ANA's Honorary Committee headed by John D. Rockefeller, IV, West Virginia's Secretary of State; and Margaret B. Dolan of North Carolina, president of the National Health Council I an_d former ANA president. NEWS 1970 Presiding will be Dr. E. Kenneth Aycock, state health officer. Among those appearing on the program will be Joe Napolitano of the Appalachia Regional Commission in Washington; Dr. Robert E. Toomey, director of the Greenville Hospital System; Alexander H. Williams, director of the division of planning of ithe American Hospital Association in Chicago; William San- dow, president of Blue Cross of South Carolina; Robert H. Johnson, executive director of the S. C. Appalachian health planning agency; and Dr. Leslie C. Meyer, a member of the board of the S. C. Appalachian health planning group. Featured speaker at the dinner Wednesday night will be Dr. W. H. Hale Jr. of the University of Georgia. 70-18 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT March 4, 1970 Officialsjiuggest: Do Hospitalized Friend Favor, Don't Visit By MIRIAM GOODSPEED "IF SOMEONE wants to a hospital attendant. Hospital authorities a l s o The normal impulse, upon visit a patient, he should wait "Often, when the stretcher pointed out that parking is hearing of a friend sick in until that patient goes home. does get on the elevator, at a premium around the the hospital, is to visit him Then the patient is well visitors already on board hospital, and traffic in peak but do him a favor, don't enough to want visitors," the express displeasure at the hours makes it difficult for doctor added. !go. crowding." ambulances bearing accident "When someone * is sick All personnel agreed that victims to get through to the the hospital is c u r r e n t l y THE ONES WHO suffer the emergency clinic on Mallard enough to be hospitalized, he neither needs nor w a n t s strained beyond its capacity most from the c u r r e n t Street. visitors," cautioned Dr. for space with 1,200 employes conditions are the patients, "The same visitor problem George M. G r i m b a l l caring for 630 (maximum) agreed hospital authorities. exists in all area hospitals," According to Mrs. Doris hospital authorities summed chairman of the operating- patients. „ ;„ Visitocs,l . who sat mC u l b e r t s o n , nursing up, "and if a friend really room.commit.ee at. GreenvUle ^ B 0once w a i t i n g W - a i t in supervisor, the nurses find wants to help, he will either General Hospital. T h e wa _tin£:?P»s, that having so many peo] wait until the patient is wellj G r i m b a l l '-' and otherpj^ fyjye been converted into' % enough to go home, or if he members of the hospital staff hospital rooms, as have the \\\\\\\\\\\m^'°mk patmust visit, he should stay a ! tires ttwpatients tpj very short time." _ ._ and ad m i n i s t r a t o n are rear ends of corridors and a lot of visitors. They don't . , • • former stretcher areas, well that night either, becoming increasingly worried .< F a m i l i e s t a k e a d v a n t age of rest and many tell us they don't about the amount, of visitors , f n which allows really care for visitors. at the hospital. t h e m t /,& s i t a n y time> » Not only can visitors infect observed a n o t h e r hospital "Last Sunday, for example, we had an estimated 4,500 the sick with flu, virus spokesman, come to see their and other epidemic diseases,! "Then; d u r i n g afternoon people but they can catch contagious] visiting hours, a d d i t i o n a l hospitalized friends. illnesses as well in the current people flood the hospital, "That's far too many for crowded c o n d i t i o n s at many visiting out of a sense this hospital to entertain comfortably," she said. Greenville General, explained of obligation. Grimball. "We have had patients "They crowd into t h e Patients are allowed a admitted for X-rays or surgery elevators, which never stop, maximum of three visitors at pick up diseases here which and if a stretcher is waiting a time under the current card necessitates cancelling their with a patient, it waits andsystem, which meant that waits, sometimes as long as Sunday the average visitorplanned treatment. 15 minutes at a time," added jjatient ratio was7_toJ.. GREENVILLE March NEWS 5, 1970, Doctor Prefers 'No Visitors' • People sick enough to be in the hospital seldom need or want visitors, Dr. George M Grimball, chairman of the operating room committee at Greenville General Hospital, said Wednesday. He said patients on stretchers sometimes have to wait for elevators and too many visitors also are causing a traffic prob lem at peak hours, he said. 70-19 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Napolitano said that t h e program lagged in ttte beginning wasted and IT)at mucB^Htf and projects quired a year of planning following government approval. The commission's current concern, he said, is evaluation of accomplishments which can only be measured through attitude and improvement. Robert A. Johnson, executive director, Appalachian Region Health Policy and Planning Council, said the commission had used $5,656,000 in 12 categories during the last 18 months and that $6.9 million will be used in 1970 projects including numerous paramedical programs at G r e e n v i l l e Technical Education Center and expansion of manpower personnel. Johnson said that Greenville TEC's graduates in paramedical areas will be accepted at Limestone College for a degree program. He also said TEC's manpower program would be HEALTH PLANNERS — Officials indent, Blue Cross; Joe Napalitano of the developed and funds would be volved in planning and providing health Appalachian Region Commission; Dr. E. used in development of the Rogservices for South Carolina Wednesday Kenneth Aycock, state health officer; and er C. Peace Institute for Rehabdiscussed programs and needs at a S. J. Ulmer Jr., director, office of Comilitative Medicine. seminar for comprehensive health proprehensive Health Planning. (Greenville President of Blue Cross of viders and planners. Participating speakNews photo by James G. Wilson) South Carolina, William Sandow, said that problems resulting in ers are from left, William Sandow, presisaid that specializing graduates higher medical costs should not create a "medical overkill." be ignored and that the current "They can do the miraculous health care delivery system but they can't take care of would have to be reorganized the lesser things like colds and to accommodate financing of the faii in medical school and why; By GRETCHEN ROBINSON flu. We match their knowledge national health i n s u r a n c e and, secondly, to find ways to News Staff Writer with facilities, mostly expensive programs, The manpower s h o r t a g e , recover "dropouts" from the and related to diseases only Alexander H. Williams, direcmedical fields. public education and need for found in medical schools, which tor, division of p l a n n i n g , health insurance revision were He said the greatest shortage neglect the ordinary family American Hospital Association, cited Wednesday as major is that of medical doctors and services and illnesses," he said that the health system is issues facing planners of South while the manpower task force said. inadequate and that planners Carolina's health programs at is currently studying ways and Two Spartanburg physicians have the best opportunity to a one-day seminar for medical means to encourage m o r e responding to the task force improve and that "Includes givtraining of subprofessionals, the personnel. doctors who have drop- panel recommended assistance ing up cherished beliefs and Some 150 physicians, hospital trained ped out have "used $100,000 in for the middle class families cooperating with the consuming administrators and o t h e r tax funds in their years of "who can't afford to b e public." selected health professionals and education. They hospitalized;" inclusion of; Dr. Leslie C. Meyer, a board consumers of health services to the bargain." should live up medical doctors and physicians; member of the Appalachian from 12 counties attended the in the planning program; in-Region Health Policy and Planmeeting sponsored by the Office Finlayson recommended day itiatioij of more preventive prac- ning Council, said the of Comprehensive Health Plan- care programs for hospital pa- ticea for illnesses rather than "vanishing American" — the iring, South Carolina State Board } i w t s w h o £° no f ne?<? n i 8 h t treatment; and quality medical general practitioner — is a must _f Health u__i._ and _,„.. Blue R W rvrwc nf' time care when p a t I e n t s of Cross of for the future and that the planreceive virtually nothing" at a care to reduce cost of ning South Carolina. group must work to hospitalization and education of :. Kenneth Aycock said hospital and education programs Dr. the public to get p e o p l e preserve the doctor patient relaI to make sure every person the seminar was designed to interested in a better standard tionship. bring all the elements involved knows what health services are of health. Dr. W. H. Hale Jr., of the available. In comprehensive health planOne physician said that the University of Georgia Center for Robert E. Toomey, director ning — private medicine, operastate's mortality rate, which is Continuing Education, told the tion of health facilities and in- of the GreenvIIIe~H6 s p i t a I higher than any state in the group that communication is imsurance — together f o r System, reacting to the presen- nation is caused by the greatest possible unless people want to discussion. Other s i m i l a r tations, urged the planning of- illiteracy in the nation. listen and that those who don't meetings will be held in Colum-1 ficials to be concerned in the "The problem is indifferent, want to listen are those who areas of licensing and liability, ignorant and apathetic people have made up their minds. bia and Pee Dee area Representatives of the S.C promotion of employes, curing who believe they are healthy The Greenville native in his Office of C o m p r e h e n s i v e of common ills and insurance if they have no fever and have "cigar box impressions" said Heaalth Planning presented task I based on the level of care. enough to eat and that their people "are talking ,more and force reports on h e a l t h Toomey said the medical field teeth stay in until they drop more and listening less and less, have lost their direction and manpower, facilities services, should look among its own ranks out," he said. resources and e d u c a t i o n ifor promotions and stop the Joe Napolitano of the Ap- have floubled their speed to get programs. i"dead endedness" of some jobs, palachian Region Commission, there," and that youngsters are W. B. Finlayson, superin-lHe commended the medical col- Washington, D.C., reported that "enduring educational activity tendent, Conway M e m o r i a Lieges for being concerned with the legislation which started the but missing out on learning." Hospital, said the greatest in-study of disease and eliminating commission in t « 9 wovtM expire He said that t h e comterest of his committee is to barriers to knowledge which has m 1971 " a n d I don't know of munication problem can be solvU ____> •__•__. _____._•___. ___•__!____ i :i 1 1 _L__. i. 1 _._ U •_ I . _ _ _ _ . . A e\A Trrifh n t-i "flmlnfinti nf tl-i_ed with an "equation of the determine how many students contributed to transplants but[ a n y move to extend i t " he past, present and future and said where your dignity is." 70-20i - S. C. Health Programs Discussed At Seminar For Medical Personnel [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] trained here are learning about, it now, though, and wo THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT Mal-cli 5, 1970 Two CF CHILDREN Easley Family's Medical Bills More Than Income How can a family exist whose yearly income totals a little over $9,000 but whose annual medical expenses come to over $10,000? "It's not easy," Mrs. Paul Rutterbush, of Easley, admits. A special congressional subcommittee i n Washington recently heard Mrs. Rutterbush tell of her family's 15 year struggle with cystic fibrosis. Two of the Rutterbush's three children were born with the inherited lung disease. The Anti-trust and Monopoly Subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee listened as Mrs. Rutterbush and Dr. Paul Patterson^of the General Medical THE and. Scientific Council of the National Cystic Foundation, told of the tragedy of the monumental medical cost incurred by families suffering from genetic or hereditary diseases. Patterson is a professor of pediatrics at Albany Medical College, U n i o n University Albany, N. Y. and is a practicing pediatrician. Mrs. Rutterbush discussed the family's daily efforts and battle with mounting medical costs to maintain the lives of Mike, who will be nine on March 15, and Herbie, who was 15 in February. GREENVILLE March 8, Mike has undergone extensive hospitalization. He was confined in December 1968; February, March, May, December 1969, and again this past January. "The doctors prognosis for Mike is, frankly, not good. He coughs 24 hours a day, and is too ill to attend school," Mrs. Rutterbush said. Mrs. Rutterbush was unable to work in 1969 because she remained at the hospital to care for her youngest son. "Cystic fibrosis is such a newly discovered disease, and the treatment so intense and unusual, that the nurses, until recently, had no training dealing with it. "The new nurses being mothers are helping by showing them the procedures when our children are hospitalized." She has high praises for the nursing staff at Greenville General Hospital. "There are 16 children in Pickens alone with t h e disease," Mrs. Rutterbush said, "and many of the families are in w o r s e economic shape than we are. "Sometimes we are told we should find a health agency or group to finance us, but who could afford us?" asked the mother. She said that hospital stays for CF children run from $35 to $240 a day. "The strain of it all is more than many of us can bear," she said. "A survey shows that 80 per cent of parents with CF children separate or divorce. "Many parents c o m m i t suicide." A cure for cystic fibrosis lies from five to ten years away, according to most medical experts. The Palmetto Chapter of Cystic Fibrosis Foundation is currently trying to raise enough money to open a CF clinic at Greenville General Hospital. NEWS 1970 Greenville General Hospital System Increases Room Rates At All Units GreenviUe Hospital System reported a net profit of $59,691 for the year ending last Oct. 5, despite a loss on patient services of $381,334, and announced simultaneously Saturday increases in room rates, effective Monday, except at Roger Huntington N u r s i n g Center at Greer. Greenville General Hospital rates will advance $2 daily Monday. So will those at Roger Huntington Nursing Center at Greer, effective April 1. Rates at other units in the system — Allen B e n n e t t Memorial Hospital at Greer, Hillcrest Hospital in t h e Simpsonville-Fountain Inn area, William G. Sirrine and Marshall I. Pickens Hospitals in Greenville — will rise by $3 to $4 per day. Trustees approved the increases in rates "to offset increased operational, costs General Hospital to $37-$42 per day for private rooms, and to resulting from necessary payroll! $32-$35 per day for semi-private adjustments, mainly, and in-] rooms. flation," W. W. McEachern. However, donations and other Roger Huntington rates will chairman of the Board of the non-patient revenue of $341,025] become $17 daily for private system, said. offset patient services deficit and $16 daily for semiMcEachern said the audit and gave the system its $59,691 rooms, private rooms. report submitted by Winn, net profit. Donations from the 1 AUen Bennett rates wUl inWright and Potter showed gross ;, Duke Endowment, Greenville crease to $30 daily for private patient revenue of $15,918,532] I County Medical Society, the and $26 daUy for semi\ throughout the six hospital j federal government and other rooms, private rooms, each up $3. iyisions for fiscal 1969. Net: agencies totaled $182,887, and Hillcrest rates will become $28 •venue of, $1J other non-patient r e v e n u e daily, up $3. There are no semited after amounted to $158,138 to account private rooms. | for the $341,025 in gifts and WilUam G. Sirrine rates wiU ictural allowances, grants. increase by $4 to $31 daUy for fad uricollecta Hospital authorities reported private rooms, and by $3 to counts which tot that 59 per cent of hospital $27 daily for s e m i - p r i v a t e $2,625,438. to meet payroll ex- j rooms. Director Robert E. Toomey i i costs went and the remaining 41 I MarshaU I Pickens private said cost of patient care penses per cent for all other , ex- room rates will increase by $4 amounted to $13,574,528, leaving ipenditures. to $43 daily with semi-private the loss from patient services New rates will push costs at room rates rising by $3 to $36. j at $281,334. 70-21 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE March GREENVILLE NEWS GREENVILLE PIEDMONT March 9, 1970 8,-1970 THE GREENVILLE March 9, Hospital Rates Rise NEWS 1970 j Rates went up at all local hospitals of the Greenville Hospital System today excepl Roger Huntington N u r s i n Center, Greer, which is to ri< CAIN by $2 daily on April 1. Greenville General Hospital TO BEGIN LAW PRACTICE rates were raised $2 daily. Rates William C. Cain has resigned A panel discussion o n at Allen Bennett Memorial Mrs. Fred A. Bettis, district his position as a s s i s t a n t Hospital, Greer, H i l l c r e s t administrator for i n t e r n a l "Medicine and Rsligion: A vice president and program Design For Health For The chairman for the Woman's Hospital, Simpsonville-Fountain operations at Greenville General Whole Man," is planned for Society of Christian Service, Inn area, William G. Sirrine Hospital to open his private law [the dinner meeting of the arranged the program. She and Marshall I. P i c k e n s practice. Cain will open his office- Senior Wesleyan Service Guild will serve on the pariel with I Hospitals, Greenville, will all March 16 at 411 Pettigru St., Tuesday at 6:15 p.m. at Robert Newton, administrator ' rise by $3 to $4 per day. Trustees approved the inwhere he intends to engage in Buncombe Street U n i t e d of SI. Francis Community Hospital; Mrs. Charles P. creases in rates to offset ing e n e r a l l a w p r a c t i c e , Methodist Church. Moran of Greenville General creased operational costs concentrating in hospital law Hospital and the Rev. James resulting from necessary payroll and medico - legal Hunter, assistant minister of adjustments and inflation, said jurisprudence. the B u n c o m b e Street W. W. McEachern, chairman Church. of the system's Board. THE GREENVILLE NEWS 'Health Of Whole Man' Guild Topic Tuesday March 10, 1970 Chaplain Says Rights Of Individual, Society Face Hospital A hospital chaplain told man- When does death occur? What a cement representatives Mon- coimmitments are made to re-! day that the biggest issue facing cipients of organ transplants? ' ispital management today is Who gets the organ? he asked! . e concept of individual rights as other examples. vs. the rights of society. Smith told the management The Rev. John Smith, chaplain organization that management for the Greenville Hospital Sys- problems in the health care m, speaking to members of field, or any other field, affect 1 he Society for the Advancement the entire community. of Management, said that the "There is no rigid rule to govall-holy approach of individual ern any," the chaplain said, i ights" is not the answer to is- "except for situation ethics. There are no hard, fast rules, sues of modern medicine. but interdisciplinary discussion The chaplain, describing him- in each case will serve the overself as a "devil's advocate," or all purpose of the law and bring <.ne who raises questions on both about the effects in the indivitides, cited issues facing hos- dual and society as a whole." pital management for which no •noral or ethical solutions have Action based on the basic unbeen decided: abortion, steriliza- selfish love for betterment of ;ion, contraception, alcohol and all humanity will best serve the drugs, organ transplants, indivi- individual desires and needs of dual right to die or the right to society, he said. He raised questions about medical care. management's responsibility to He cited a problem case in employes and said, "There is Greenville where 21 illegitimate need for a real concern for the children lived in one house and person. There needs to be someate peanut butter from a news- one to look at this to see what paper on the floor. is going on and be sensitive to "Let's do it (sterilize)," he the problem areas without besaid. "But who's to decide?" traying confidences." THE GREENVILLE March CHIP 10, NEWS 1970 :i Greenville Hospitals Join Project Robert E. Toomey, director of GreenviUe Hospital System, said Monday ithe system is participating in the Carolinas' Hospital Improvement Program. It is a joint multi-hospital management engineering project organized through the North and South Carolina Hospital Associations and North Carolina State University. The program began ' with 23 m e m b e r hospitals. Bill D. Garrett wil be Greenville Hospital System's coordinator, Toomey said An initial grant from -the Duke Endowment helped d e f r a y organization costs for CHIP. The CHIP project has a threephase approach to improving hospital effectiveness and reducing costs, Toomey said. 70-22 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE G R E E N V I L L E NEWS M a r c h 10, 1970 air For Students Set Thursday from Anderson. This is expectBy LUCILLE B. GREEN ed to give an hourly traffic flow News Staff Writer The 1970 Job Fair, to be held of more than 800 students. "< hursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. High school juniors, interested at Textile Hall, will not only parents and others are urged to provide potential career infor- take advantage of the late afmation through 33 booths spon- ternoon hours. All booths will be . ->red by the professions, busi- staffed throughout the day. r 3ss and industry for more than Miss Margaret Keith, director "300 high school seniors, but of guidance for the school disi will give every visitor a better trict, said Monday: (imprehension of the communi- "It is a unique method of i. s resources. bringing vocational guidance to students at a time when it is The Greenville County School T istrict will bus its 3,200 seniors most meaningful. Our Job Fair, t-> the exhibition hall between co-sponsored by the Greater <J a.m. and 2 p.m., with another Greenville Chamber of Com120 seniors making the^ trip merce and Textile Hall Corpora- THE GREENVILLE March 12, NEWS 1970 Sans Souci Club Tours New Hospital Facility Thomas F. Kirby, principal of the children's re-education center at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, conducted a tour for the Sans Souci Study Club recently. C h i l d e r s ; corresponding secretary, Mrs. S h i e l d s Walker; treasurer, Mrs. Dick Mauldin, and p u b l i c i t y chairman, Mrs. L e o n a r d England. Before the tour Mr. Kirby told of facilities and the treatment available at the hospital. He gave five services of a comprehensive c o m m u n i t y , mental health center. In-patient care, out-patient care, partial-hospitalization, education and consultation, and emergency service. A b a n q u e t honoring husbands and new members was announced for April 11 at the Colonial Court. New members are Mrs. Tommy Thompson and Mrs. W. W. Rodgers. The club has contributed $10 toward the Margaret Mahon children's book room at the county library. Mrs. John A. Carson Jr., incoming northwestern district director of the South Carolina Federation Of Women's Clubs, installed officers. They are, president, Mrs. James E. Shedd; vice president, Mrs. Walter Dean; r e c o r d i n g secretary, Mrs. Clyde tion, is unique in the Southeast struction Company, W. R. Grace — the only such program of this Co. Cryovac Division, Women in Construction, the U. S. Army, type," Miss Keith said. Dr. M. T. Anderson, superin- LTV Electro Systems, Inc., tendent, said M o n d a y night, Southern Weaving, Printing In"The school district is indeed dustry of the Carolinas, Belkfortunate to be able to share in Simpson, the Federal Bureau of the 1970 Job Fair. The Job Fairs Investigation, Meyers - Arnold of the past two years have prov- and Ivey's, the Young Lawyers ed to be invaluable experiences Club, Her Majesty, W u n d a to the students who have par- Weve, F. W. Poe, General Electicipated and we sincerely hope tric Company, Greenville City that all juniors and seniors in Fire and Police Departments high schools will take advantage and the Greenville Association of this time to become better of Insurance Women. acquainted with the local world of work." Two of the booths, that sponsored by the Youth Opportunity Center and that by the S. C. Association of Personnel Services, will give students advice on how to apply for jobs. Other booth sponsors include the Vocational Rehabilitation Center, the Greenville General Hospital System, Liberty Life Insurance Company, The Peoples National Bank, the U. S. Air Force, J. P. Stevens & Co. Inc., Daniel Construction Company, the U. S. Marine Corps, the United Merchants and Manufacturers, Greenville TEC, the Fouke Company, Homelite Division of Textron Inc., Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company. Also, Duke Power Company, Union Carbide, Yeargin Con- 70-23 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT March 12, 1970 Job Fair Helps Seniors Make Up Mind: Which Vocation To Choose By STUART CAMPBELL More than 3,500 Greenville area high school s e n i o r s participated in the Greater Greenville Chamber of Commerce's third annual job fair which opened at Textile Hall this morning. Booths telling of employment - irtunities greeted the young Greenvillians as they arrived at the fair at 9:30 a.m. "We have tried to have a balance of opportunities for both sexes, but it is a fact that more girls will not go on to college," said David Merritt, job fair committee chairman. "We are not just looking at ie 40 per cent who will not go on to higher education," he school graduates in Greenville continued. "There is equal in- County will be working six terest in those who wUl be at- months after graduation, actending vocational schools for cording to Tom Stapleton of two years and college for four the chamber. Of that number years before they enter the about 95 per cent will seek business world. This is a long-i employment in the county. range program which is looking;| A majority of tbe -simd beyond June of this year." toekrtsdvantage of the Statistics show that 900 high ask questions and see lossible. Few, h ided on a caree . .. ft is harder today to recruit [young people than it was five years ago," said Tony Moody, assistant personnel director for Liberty Life Insurance Co. Moody headed the firm's ith which .was on display, for third year at theJofJ'fair, • } ttieMijhost, ijob fairs. Many hired three, years ago are still on the job, s business can be lun, and vice versa, s | area hign acuool seniors discovered today at the . 1970 Job Fair sponsored by the Greatgr Greenville Chamber of Commerce. The displays in Textile Hall are the, greatest ad diversification in tbe histc^.«^tfee^ne-taa_^ Jvent, irrjtftgufatea. three years' ago. Sateh exhibit .was designed to teach seniors, something "about respective vocations, suck as','left to/tight, telephone company employment, More Than 3,500 Students U. S. Air Fo^ce service and health careers: (PiedView Displays At 1970 Job Fair monj. photos byTlWls M. Burress) '__ ^ 70-24 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT March 12, 1970 Shearers Thrilled By Air Force One Trip, Nixon Stationery^SS Man Good Afternoon This Is Gil Rowland EDWARD K. SHEARER of 190 Keith Drive, radiological technician at Greenville General Hospital, tells this story of a thrilling flight and an unusual letter: He is a retired military man who came back to Greenville because he was at Donaldson Air Force Base three years. Last December he and his wife, the former Jackie Tripp of Greenville, applied for the usual retired persons' space-available transportation from Charleston to Puerto Rico. After a vacation they were informed at Ramey AFB in Puerto Rico that the regular Air Force flight back to Charleston would be delayed several days. An official at the base said a flight was leaving right away for Washington and he would allow them to board it if they wished. The Shearers were surprised to find that it was Air Force One, President Nixon's 707. They boarded along with a captain and his wife and a private on emergency leave. "They treated us like kings," Shearer recalls. Edward K. Shearer and hte son, Mike, 190 Keith Drive, have the place mat as a reminder of a memorable flight on Air Force One. (Piedr Leon E. Carnes) Except for the crew in the front end, the only other persons aboard were five stewards who hovered over the five passengers with drinks, food and lots of personal attention. As the plane bounced through rough weather on the way to the nation's capital, Shearer admired the place mat ("Welcome Aboard Air Force One") at dinner. He asked a steward if he might have it. The wonderfully kind steward suggested that Shearer take a clean one instead, and he soon returned and handed Shearer a large manila envelope. It contained a place mat and a large amount of stationery — very special White House stationery containing the President's seal. THE MEMORABLE TRIP ended and the Shearers picked up their car in Charleston and returned to Greenville, where he went back to his job taking X-rays. Recently during the school integration discussions, Shearer decided to write a letter and express his opinion about the situation. Why not write President Nixon about it? he asked himself. And why not write it on White House stationery with no return address outside so it might go to the President instead of ending up with some secretary? he also asked himself. v Four days after mailing it, Shearer drove up to his home to find a nicely-dressed man waiting there. He identified himself as a member of the U. S. Secret Service and said he would like to talk to Shearer. As Shearer's head whirled with theories about what it meant, the agent told Shearer the President had received his letter. He quoted the President as saying it was "nice letter" and added that the President wanted to know where he got the stationery. The visitors explained that the stationery was used only by the President and his personal secretaries, and that it was kept locked in a special room in Washington. Reference was made to the "leak" that let it get out. The Secret Service man asked detailed questions about the flight and the way the stationery was secured. MIKE SHEARER, 12, was intrigued that a genuine Secret Service man was sitting in their living room, and the agent pleasantly showed the boy his credentials. Mike took no part in the discussion until the agent asked how much stationery was received, and then before his father could answer he piped up loud and clear: "We've got a lot of that stuff." The agent took all but two sheets and one envelope, with the understanding that what was left would not be used. Shearer saw several generals at Ramey on the day of the flight, and he speculates that Air Force One may have brought them and was returning to Washington empty. He also points out that Air Force One crews sometimes take practice flights when no regular flights are scheduled. He said it is interesting to note that Mrs. Nixon is also a radiological technician. #» Shearer is listed with we American Registry of Radiological Technicians, and as such he signs his letters with the initials, "R.T.," after his name. As an "R.T." Ihe not only makes X-rays, but assists the radiologist who has them made. 70-25 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE NEWS 1 M a r c h TAKE STATE HONORS — Student nurses at Greenville General Hospital were elected to high offices at the state convention of student nurses in Columbia. They are, from left, Miss Elaine Palmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Palmer of Bamberg, recording secretary; Miss Susan Bellwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. O. THE 13, 1970 Bellwood of 8 Auburn St. in GreenviUe, member of the committee on nominations; Miss Bevery Perry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Perry of Dechard, Tenn., president; and Miss Lill Sue Porter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garvin E. Porter of Pickens, second vice president. (Greenville News photos by Louis M. Burress) GREENVILLE March 14, PIEDMONT 1970 Physicians Seminar Opens Here March 24 Dr. Charles Moore, professor of medicine, Tulane University, and chief of cardiology, Oschner Clinic, New Orleans, La. Dr. James Harkess, professor of orthopedics, University of Louisville, Louisville, Ky. Dr. Walter Newman, associate professor o f pharmacology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Dr. Harris D. Riley Jr., professor of p e d i a t r i c s , Hull also will be speaker at University of South Carolina the opening banquet at the Medical Center. Dr. Vince Moseley, Greenville Country Club. coordinator of the S o u t h Other seminar speakers will Carolina Regional M e d i c a l include: Program, Charleston. • Dr. Kenneth Walton, profess • The annual seminar is designchairman of the departaMH ed to keep the general pracrology, Emory University i'ioner updated on medical nta, Ga. fl,knowledge and is accepted by 'r. John J. Canary, professor*]G tne American Academy of of medicine, and director 0 f j 21e n e r a l Practice as credit, for the division of endocrinology uI s u a lhours' __sl_i_h___ The seminar ly Georgetown University Medical attracts physicians from Center, Washington. D.C. throughout the Up-state, other areas of the state and parts General practitioners of medicine will be briefed bv a cross-section of medical specialists at the 14th Post Graduate Seminar March 24-26 at G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital. - ' Dr. Edgar Hull, dean of the Louisiana State U n i v e r s i t y Medical Center, Shreveport, La., will be lead-off speaker March 24 at 8:30 At the state convention Miss Gail Moore, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Jack Moore of Greer, w a s named "Miss Who's Who" for Greenville General Hospital, where she is student government president of the school of nursing. 70-26 of other states [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] • GREENVILLE NEWS March 15, 1970 GREENVILLE March Greenville Medical Seminar To Be Held The 14th annual Greenville Post Graduate Seminar for medical specialists will be held at Greenville General Hospital March 24-26. The three-day p r o g r a m designed to update medical knowledge for the general practitioner is expected to attract 300 physicians from eight states. The seminar is accepted by the American Academy of General Practice .for 21 hours credit. Dr. M. Gordon Howie, president GPGS, said the program will feature discussion o f problems faced by physicians everyday. In addition, more than 30 representatives of laboratories and pharmaceutical companies will be exhibitors. Dr. Edgar Hull, professor of medicine and dean at Louisiana State University Medical Center, will begin at 9 a.m. Tuesday with a p r e s e n t a t i o n on "Pericarditis 1970." Wednesday at 8 p.m. Hull wil speak on "Thoughts on Change a n d Progress and Everyday Crises." At a luncheon Thursday, Hull will speak on "Relative Roles of History, P h y s i c a l Examination and Laboratory in Clinical Diagnosis Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow." Other speakers will include Dr. John J. Canary, professor of medicine and d i r e c t o r , d i v i s i o n of endocrinology, Georgetown University Medical Center; Mr. Kenneth Walton, professor and chairman, department of urology, E m o r y University; Dr. Charles B. Moore, professor of medicine, Tulane University, and chief cardiology, Oschner Clinic in New Orleans, La.; Dr. Harris D. Riley Jr., professor of pediatrics, U n i v e r s i t y of GREENVILLE March 15, PIEDMONT 16, 1970 Post Graduate Seminar Set The 14th annual Greenville post graduate seminar for medical specialists will be held at Greenville General Hospital ]! March 24-26. It is designed to update medical knowledge for the general practitioner and is accepted for 21 hours credit by the American Academy of General Practice. The seminar is sponsored by the Greenville General Hospital, Greenville County M e d i c a l Society and General Practice Division of GGH. Oklahoma Medical Center. Also Dr. Vince Moseley, coordinator of the S o u t h Carolina Regional M e d i c a l Program, Charleston; DrJ Walter Newman, a s s o c i a t e professor of phamaeology; and Dr. Claude Frazier, Allergist', editor, Asheville, N. C. Guests expected to attend the seminar include Dr. William M. McCord, president, M e d i c a l University of South Carolina at Charleston; Dr. William L. Perry, president, South Carolina Medical A s s o c i a t i o n of Chesterfield; and Dr. Harrison L. Peeples, president, South Carolina Academy of General Practice of Estill. The seminar is sponsored by the Greenville General Hospital, Greenville County M e d i c a l Society and General Practice, Division of GGH. GREENVILLE PIEDMONT NEWS 1970 Area Dietitians To Meet Tuesday Dietitians and food service supervisors of the Piedmont District Dietetic Association will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Brookhaven Nursing Home in Gaffney. Ezran Ferris, director of food service at Greenville General Hospital, will speak on "Convenience Foods." Architect Design Award Marshall I. Pickens Hospital's unusual design won its architect, J. Harold Mack & Associates, Inc., an award of merit from the South Carolina Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Mack recently pre- 70-27 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] sented the plaque to Robert E. Toomey, director of the Greenville Hospital System, who will hang it on public view in the hospital. (Piedmont photo by Bennie Granger) ' *£-ik — GREENVILLE NEWS March 19, 1970 GREENVILLE Two Greenville Groups Co-Sponsor Child Forum The Greenville Community Council and the Junior League of Greenville, Inc., co-sponsored an all-day child study forum at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital Wednesday with Dr. Gerda McCahan, p r o f e s s o r of psychology at Furman University, as moderator. The session sought to provide an opportunity to exchange upto-date information on services offered and on unmet needs; to provide an opportunity to pool ideas, interests; to explore ways agencies can support each other; to recognize common goals; and to coordinate planning. Services discussed were those which benefit the normal, the disadvantaged and the exceptional child. Participants included those professionally involved in serving children in the fields of education, recreation, cultural enrichment, welfare, h e a l t h , law, volunteer services, public information, referral and community planning. THE March 24, 20, 1970 S.C Nurses Group Honors Greenvillian COLUMBIA - The S . C . Nurses' Association has named Mrs. Ruth Alexander Nicholson of Greenville as South Carolina's most involved nurse. The action is part of a nationwide effort by state nurses associations to stimulate more nurses to be involved in their communities, to demonstrate the association's commitment to meaningful activities, to find nurses in every state whose activities exemplify this ideal and to encourage more nurses to be involved in their professional association. Mrs. Nicholson now becomes ije state's nominee for the na- NEWS 1970 At General Hospital Seminar Will Begin Today In Greenville Physicians from a 10-state the South Carolina Regional area will meet here Tuesday Medical Program, Charleston. for the 14th annual Greenville Other speakers will include Post Graduate Seminar at Dr. Kenneth Walton, professor Greenville General Hospital. and chairman of the department Dr. Edgar Hull, professor of of urology, Emory University; medicine and dean, Louisiana Dr. Charles B. Moore, professor State University Medical School, of medicine, Tulane University, I will open the three day program and chief cardiology, Oschner with a session on "Pericarditis Clinic, New Orleans; Dr. Harris D. Riley Jr., professor of 1970" at 9 a.m. Tuesday. Dr. John J. Canary, professor pediatrics, U n i v e r s i t y of of medicine and d i r e c t o r , Oklahoma Medical Center; Dr. d i v i s i o n of endocrinology, Walter Newman, a s s o c i a t e Georgetown University Medical professor o f pharmacology, Center, will speak on "The Medical University of South Treatment of E n d o c r i n e Carolina; and Dr. C l a u d e Emergencies" at the 1:10 p.m. Frazier, Allergist, editor. The subject will speak on daily luncheon. problems dealt with by pracDr. Hull will speak on ticing physicians regardless of "Thoughts on Change a n d their specialty interest. Progress and Everyday Crises" at the 8 p.m. banquet Wednesday. "The Liver and the Last Five Years" will be the Wednesday luncheon subject of Dr. Vince Moseley, coordinator of March Mrs. Ruth A. Nicholso n They were asked to submit critiques of the session which will be compiled and made available to the 1970 Greenville County White House Committee on Children and Youth, to forum participants and to other interested persons. GREENVILLE NEWS THE tion's most involved nurse, to be named at the 1970 convention of the American N u r s e s ' Association in Miami Beach, Fla., May 3-8. Always active in community affairs, Mrs. Nicholson's involvement has been directed toward p r o g r a m s concerned with human growth and development of lower socio-economic people as well as education and cultural activities. She is immediate past chairman of the Greenville County Foundation, which she helped to found to provide for the health and welfare of future generations in this county. She is currently president of District Six, South Carolina Nursing Association; a member of SCNA board of directors; nursing representative on the Professional Advisory Council; a member of the Inactive Health Personnel Project sponsored by the S.C. Hospital Association; a member of the Health Facilities Task Force of the Health Forum, Comprehensive Health Care Planning. She is a member of the advisory board of the Florence Crittendon Home, Charleston; chairman of the Greenville County Health Planning Council and serves as a full time faculty member of the G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital School of Nursing. GREENVILLE March 24, NEWS 1970 Clinics Closed Rest Of Week All clinics for out-patients at Greenville General Hospital have been cancelled the remainder of this week and will reopen next Monday, a hospital official said Monday night. Reason for the cancellation is the 14th annual Greenville Post Graduate Seminar to be held in the clinic auditorium. Arrangements for emergency clinic cases will be made elsewhere, the official said. 70-28 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE NEWS March 2 5 , 1970 Doctor Says Endocrine Crises 'Are Still With Us' ofessor of medicine and, dean of the, Louisiana State - U n i v e r s i t y Medical School at New Orleans and Shreveport, will speak at ihe banquet Wednesday night. His topic will be 'Thoughts on Change and Progress a n d Everyday Crises." Other speakers participating in the three-day meeting include Dr. Kenneth Walton, professor and chairman of the department of urology at Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.; Dr. Charles B. Moore, professor of medicine at Tulane University and chief of cardiology at Oschner Clinic, New Orleans, La.; Dr. Harris) D. Riley Jr., professor of pediatrics at the University of Oklahoma Medical C e n t e r , Oklahoma City, Okla. Also, Dr. James Harkness,! professor of orthopiedics at the University of L o u i s v i l l e , Louisville, Ky.; Dr. Walter Newman, associate professor of pharmacology at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; and Dr. Claude Frazier, allergist and editor Asheville, N. C. About 250 doctors are expected to register for the seminar. About 100 attended the r "The ability to handle opening session Tuesday. emergencies then permits The seminar is sponsored by patient to be treated," he said. Greenville General Hospital, its1 In the past many patients could general practice division and the County M e d i c a li not be treated for endocrine Greenville Societ y- , _____ disorders because they could not survive the emergencies, he said. Canary spoke about emergencies including the crises of hyperthyroidism, the coma of hypothroidism (myxedema), the recognition and treatment of severe hypocalcemia and diabetes insipidus, 'water diabetes). He will speak Wednesday about medical management of kidney stones and Thursday about excess blood calcium leavels. Dr. Vince M o s e l e y , of Charleston, coordinator of thr South Carol .Program, Liver I at Wi "The collaboration of clinical medicine and basic and clinical research is epitomized in the recognition and treatment of endocrine disorders," Dr. John J. Canary said here Tuesday. Canary, professor of medicinp and director of the division of endocrinology at Georgetown University Medical Center, at Washington, D. C, spoke on "The Treatment of Endocrine Emergencies" at the 14th annual Greenville Post G r a d u a t e Seminar at Greenville General Hospital. He told physicians attending the opening-day luncheon that endocrine emergencies "are still with us," but "the emergencies which in the past had very high mortality rates can now be handled much more effectively." This improvement in the treat. ment of such emergencies is "largely dual to the observations made many years ago by many good doctors and the application of those observations coupled with the better understanding of the mechanisms of Ihe production of .the symptom, basic and clinical r afforded us," Canary 'GREENVILLE PIEDMONT March 26, 1970 Doctor: Medical Research Lacking Support By MIRIAM GOODSPEED He added that the secret to "Past public support o f this type of treatment is to medical research enabled scien- have the leg semi-flexed and tists to make revolutionary in a meticulously applied tight breakthroughs in treatments and cast. After six weeks, the full diagnoses of many diseases over cast is removed and a half cast the past 10 years, but that sup- put on. port is lacking today," Dr. John "Our shortest healing rate J. Canary said this morning. with this method has been 8 "This country has, in the past weeks, the longest 28 weeks, five years, established different as versus the pin method compriorities from those earlier monly used which has 12 weeks ones by which doctors learned as the least time and 37 weeks so much about disease and by maximum." which we are profiting today," Vaccines were discussed by said the doctor, who is director Dr. Harris D. Riley J r . , of the Division of Endocrinology professor of pediatrics at the1 at Georgetown U n i v e r s i t y Oklahoma Medical C e n t e r Medical Center, Washington, D. Oklahoma City, Okla. C. "German measles vaccine is Canary spoke at the 14th an- safe and effective for use in nual Greenville Post-Graduate children, but in adults it can 1 Seminar which concluded at cause a mild form of arthritis," Greenville General Hospital to- Riley warned. day. He said that no vaccine is He discussed "The Mechanism effective if the individual has and Management of already been exposed to the Hypercalcemia," which is the disease. scientific term for those who | Asked about the threatened have too much calcium in their German measles e p i d e m i c , blood. Other morning speakers told Riley said, "We have already of a new method of treating seen small outbreaks of this leg fractures and advances in disease, but we really aren't worried because now we have immunization shots. Canary, said infants sometime the means to prevent it. come down with the calcium blood disorder because some "Women of child bearing age !mothers, in their zeal for caring should have a blood test to for their baby's health, give find out whether or not they have had rubella. I they haven't, them too many vitamins. "These babies get an overdose they can take the vaccine if of Vitamin D because it is found they want to run the risk of in both food and formula sup- a mild arthritic attack. ;p!ementaries as well as in their "The best approach is to prevent the spread of the disease usual form of vitamins> "The mother who thinks that among children." There are vaccines for rubeola if two drops of a Vitamin are ! good for a baby then ten drops or regular measles as well as 'are even better, can make her mumps, he said, adding that infant very sick," he cau- 'the rubeola vaccine is now effective and increased use of tioned. Dr. James Harkess, professor it was advised. of orthopedics at the University of Louisville, Ky., told of a -new way of treating leg fractures in his lecture, "Conservajtive Treatment of Fractures of |the Tibia." "We apply a full cast, and, as soon as the cast is solid, the patient is told to stomp on it and start walking. "For about the first three jweeks, he walks with crutches, then without. There should be no pain, but if there is, something is wrong and the cast should be taken off and a new one applied," he said. 70-29 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE NEWS March 27, 1970 GREENVILLE =g' One sales representative noted that laboratories and salesmen are required to keep records on the number and recipient of all drugs now on the "drug 29, 1970 A major grant from the Ap- Statistics for the system's palachian Comission and a do- five units for 1969 — Greenville nation of the Peace Fund of General, Hillcrest H o s p i t a l , Greenville and awarding of the William G. Sirrine Hospital, contract for the four new hos- _ "arshall I. Pickens Hospital and pital projects on Grove Road Roger Huntington N u r s i n g site are listed as highlights of Center — show a total of 35,101 the 1969 annual report of the patients discharged, 4 7,168, Greenville Hospital System. emergency room visits, 75,067 "Vilson C. Wearn, retiring X-ray examinations, 5 9 9 , 4 3 7 chairman, board of trustees, laboratory tests, 13,517 operacredited the Appalachian grant tions, 3,430,842 pounds of linen of $1,800,000 and the $300,000 laundered. donation of the Roger C.:MPeace Fund with making posr e the Gross patient revenue of realization of the planned $15,918,632 minus charities andl1 medical facilities on the Grove uncollectables of $2,625,438 made Foad property earlier than ex- net revenue of $13,293,194. Cost: of patient care $13,574,528 for erted. the year ending Oct. 5, 1969, The prajecls include a S created a loss from patient "neral Medical S u r . services of $281,334 which was osmiaTf 5j)-bed Roger C. offset by donations and non-pasttute f o r Rehabilil tient revenue of $341,025 for a Medicine; the Diagn- .tic net gain .__• the year of Treatment Center f o r $59,691. patients and an air conditioning and heating plant. Contract has Sixty five per cent of the been awarded to Algernon-Blair hospital income is paid out in salaries and benefits to hospital of Montgomery, Ala. Wearn and James H . to the 1,750 employes and the remaining 35 per cent goes for Woodside vacancies on the providing services, board have been filled by equipment, facilities, medicines and supThomas K. Johnstone Jr. plies for patients. William H. Orders. N e wand ly elected officers are W. W. Special units of the hospital McEachern; chairman; David — emergency room, radiology, E. Cromwell, vice-chairman; cobalt, intensive care and physical therapy — reported and Hary Daniel, secretary. Robert E. Toomey, director, progress and increases in visita,ville Hospital S y s t e m tion. Emergency room visits were nearly 10,000 more than •his admirristrat. five years ago. e number of ei increased fi The physical therapy unit ago to S.O for recorded 32,334 visits in 1969 compared to 24,424 in 1964. The administrator listed 1 Tiese facilities are used by growing problem of financing graduates of Duke University, as one of the major threats University of North Carolina and to voluntary hospitals which he the University of Florida for and p r a c t i c a l exsaid is caused by additional clinical perience. loads on facilities by necessary Dr. Raymond C. Ramage was federal health programs for the appointed director of medical aged and indigent. education for the hospital's acOther areas deserving con- tive program for interns and tinued attention include preven-, residents. L. W. Stoneburner is tive medicine, federal Medicare; president of the medical staff and Medicaid programs, public and Dr. E. Arthur Dreskin is education, training young people, president-elect. for careers in health care, developing economic measures and providing health c a r e programs for the community ffiK-«-fi£^.^»!l pharmaceutical companies have intauiuig narcotics and been trying to keep up with ratiquilizers and pep.-pills a are oh the list. physicians. The 1 a b representatives Sessions on hypercalcemia, brought with them some new new treatment of leg fractures pills as well as old established and immunizations closed out remedies to display for physi- the final day of the seminar. cians, who in spite of their Dr. John J. Canary, director, extensive education, have to run division of endoctriniology at to keep up with the ad- Georgetown University Medical Center, warned that mothers vancements in medicine. who give infants too many Dr. Vincent Moseley, a prac- vitamins can make a child very ticing physician turned ad- ill. He said an overdose of ministrator, cited t h e im- calcium or Vitamin D often portance of e d u c a t i o n a l causes the calcium b l o o d seminars to practicing physi- disorder, hypercalcemia. cians. A full cast applied meticulousMoseley, coordinator of the ly with the leg semi-flexed South Carolina Regional Medical allows the shortest healing rate Program, said that during his of fractures of the tibia, Dr. practicing years one-fourth of James Harkness, professor of his time was spent in orthopedics at the University research. of Louisville. "Medical education is not He said the new tight cast static," he said. "Physicians allows the patient to walk with have got to read and learn and crutches for three weeks and talk with colleagues. One thing at the end of six weeks a half opens the door to something cast is applied. Healing time else." with this method ranges from Moseley said physicians must eight weeks to 28 weeks whereas read current journals, attend the pin method commonly used medical meetings and spend a ranges from 12 weeks to 36 minimum of 50 hours in lectures weeks healing time. and formal class work per year Dr. Harris D. Riley Jr., "to barely keep up. Reading professor of pediatrics at the •and listening is the only way Oklahoma Medical Center, said for a physician to maintain that the German measles vaccine is effective for use in some balance." He said that before the children but can cause a mild restrictions on releases of new form of arthritis in adults. medicine, his patients would He said that the German come in and tell him of some measles epidemic does not pose any great problem because the new drug they had read about "But I used to try to keep vaccine is available. up with them," he said, "by Vaccines for regular measles reading all those magazines. If and mumps are also available, I hadn't read about it, I would he said. always check " The medical advancements are much faster than the treatment discoveries, Moseley con "It's like this," he said, "We know the building is on fire when flames shoot out of the roof even though we see the flames down inside. But we ususally don't have the fire hydrant or the hose to train on that particular spot." The lab men talk much like the physicians and are apt to prescribe their own pills or suggest one of their competitor's for treatment. March Grqntf Donation, Adjects listed In Systems Annual Report New, Old Medicines Displayed At Seminar By GRETCHEN ROBINSON News Staff Writer This week at -the 14th annual Greenville Post G r a d u a t e Seminar, representatives o f NEWS 70-30 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] statistics for the year 1969 ANNUAL Patients Discharged Clinic Visits Emergency Boom Visits Births X-ray Examinations Laboratory Tests Operations Physical Therapy Visits Electrocardiograms Blood Transfusions Meals Served Linen Laundered (Pounds) Patient Days (Adult) Number of Employees per In-Patient ' (Fb/tytar comparisons) Greenville Hospital System 32.727 32,213 37,690 4.212 60,782 311,090 11.722 24,424 6.793 6,146 1,031,475 2,862.818 248,829 35,101 31,644 47,168 3,988 75,067 599,437 13.517 32,334 10,688 5,780 1,103,459 3,430,842 284,228 1.7 2.0 the breakdown of expenditures payroll 59% financial data YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 5,1969 2,625,438 13,293,194 13.574,528 (281,334) 341,025* Loss from Patient Services Donations and Other Non-patient Revenue Net Gain for lhe Year other 41% $ 15,918,632 Gross Palient Revenue Deduct Contractual Allowances, Charily Services and Uncollectible Accounts Net Patient Revenue Cost of Patient Care S 59.691 'Constat* d donations a n d grants tor t j w c i f i e purpose* from Tha [Xjko Endowment. Gwonvllta County Medical Society. Tha Fod«ral Government a n d others amounting t o $182,687 and other non-patiom revenue amounting to S188.13S. board of trustees ROBERT E. TOOMEY Our six hospital divisions and our medical and hospital staffs throughout tbe Greenville Hospital System responded valiantly during 1969 to care for more patients than ever before. We recorded a total of 28-1.22S patient days (adult), which can be interpreted by the layman to mean that our patient load was extremely heavy and bed space in nursing areas was at a premium. Patients' and tlieir families became personally aware of the situation. The problem of patients securing the type of room accommodations they desire upon admission to the hospitals will continue to exist until the completion of our new hospital construction on the Grove Road property and the enlargement and improvement programs at our hospital divisions in Greer and Simpsonville and in the North GreenviUe County area, when more beds will be available. Our average citizen may not be y t f aware of t h e fact that health care is ranked as the third largest industry in the United States today. Our hospitals have become more complex and more sopmstreated (o meet tne increasing ana varying demands for health services, and they must function with the precision of an assembly line. At tbe same time, considerate and personalized One of tlie major threats to our voluntary attention must I « given each patient as an indihospitals is the growing problem of financing vidual to serve his particular needs. health care. The federal health programs for the Changes in many areas and many forms are aged and the indigent — necessary and-desirable" constantly thrust upon u., but our basic objec- as they are for the comprehensive health care tives of the Greenville Hospilal System of pro- needs of all our people — have placed additional viding health facilities arid quality medical and loads on hospital facilities. Problems offinandnft both for tbe patient and the hospital, are of connursing care for our people remai siderable concern to all of us. We r to seek and develop responsible methods for financing health care, possibly through thirdparty health insurance programs. Hospitals cannot operate at a loss and must b e able to pay the rising Jnflatiomiy costs, over which we have little control, for tlie necessary staffing, equipment and supplies to provide medical and nursing care. It is important that people in the community remember that the hospital's major source of income is through payment for services rendered* to our patients. Because of tbe broad spectrum of illnesses; such as acute, chronic, mental, long-term, shortterm, elc., we are planning .and attempting to provide comprehensive institutional health care to provide different kinds of services for patients with different lands of medical and nursing 7Uj-e~u. T"~ edical staff Residents: After months of searching by the Education Committee of the Medical "Staff, Dr. Raymond C. Ramago accepted the appointment as Director of Medical Education, and it is already apparent that interest by medical students in our Hospital System for further training is on the upswing. Utilization review and rece rtifications of Medicare and Medicaid patients continue to be the number one "bugaboo" to the Medical Staff. For the most part, the Staff has done an excellent job in bringing these up to an acceptable level. Recent guidelines outlined and enunciated by the Federal government have been established by the carriers of Medicare, defining limitations of coverage in tlie hospital and extended care facilities. These have plaoed-the physician in a rather embarrassing spot, relative to the families of these patients, who have not been adequately informed as to what will or will not be covered in the federal medical care'programs. An attempt is being made through the local news media to educate the public to these facts. Important advances in medical care for the community occurred in 1989, all culminating from a long and active period of planning by dte Medical Staff and a very cooperative and ! helpful Administration and Board' of Trustees of the Greenville Hospital System. • These' have allowed our crowded hospital to keep pace with, and in fact, lead others in the area as an ultra-modern diagnostic and ^treatment center. Tbe pew medical center on Grove Road has. Greenville Ceneral Hospital continues to be active as an education center for Interns sad been started, and upon completion in two years, it will be a great asset to our community and physicians. Much thought and study will be required' to correlate the new hospital complex facilities with our present facilities, so that nothing will undermine the fine harmony among our physicians, which we have always enjoyed. Seventeen new physicians have come to our community to practice medicine, and a high percentage of these began their careers as interns in our hospital Most of these are specialists and will .further enhance Greenville as a medical center. We long for the return of more general practitioners to this area. We have lost some to specialty, fields and industrial medicine, and the problem of available medical care to the people of Greenville County remains a number one priority in our community. WILSON C. WEARN JAMES H. WOOOSIDE HARRY [.AMi-L The paramount issue for-thought end attention by the Board of Trustees of the Greenville Hospital System for a number of years has been the gnawing realization that our health care facilities we're becoming rapidly and dangerously overtaxed. A vigorous and constant effort has been rewarded with progress and achievements, closely related with the sequence of our work and pi.i m ling, to provide for badly needed buildings and services. We have continued to give penetrating attention to the rising costs, caused by our econontiy and national inflation, in "providing hospital services to our patients. And while our charges and costs have been kept well below "other hospitals of comparable size* in the area a n d state, and considerably less than those on a national level, we cannot but face the realization that inflation and patients' needs will cause health costs to continue to increase. Two major grants during 1969 offered us great encouragement The Appalachian Regional Commission allocated a grant of $1,800,000 toward construction of a new rehabilitative hospital to serve regional needs. Shortly thereafter, The Peace Fund of Greenville announced a donation of $300,000 to the Greenville Hospital System, in honor of the late Roger C. Peace, publisher and community and national leader, to assist with the financing of this new hospital. Tito Board initiated action to name this new structhe Roger C Peace Institute for Rehabilitative Medicine. These grants will make possible the realization of one of our planned medical facilities on the Grove Road property much earlier than we had anticipated. We have been most pleased with the substantial progress made during 1969. The myriad elements involved in a comprehensive health care program have been combined and nurtured to benefit all of our citizens for the years to c o m a Wo reached the point in October in our planning' and programming when we received bids for the construction of four new hospital projects on Crave Road. These will be the 308-bed Ceneral Medical-Surgical Hospital; tbe 50-bed Roger C. Peace Institute for Rehabilitative Medicine; the Diagnostic and Treatment Center, which wil! furnish services to outpatients as well as to those who are hospitalized, and a licating and air conditioning plant. The contract for these four projects was awarded Algcfnon-Blair of Montgomery, Alabama. When completed and fully equipped, tbe costs will total $21,000,000. Of this amount, $6,000,000 is from the following sources: Hill-Burton, the Appalachian Regional Commission, The Peace Fund of Greenville, The Duke Endowment, and existing hospital funds. The remaining $15,000,000 will be from the sale of some of the hospital bonds authorized by our Greenville County voters last November. GREENVILLE GENERAL HOSPITAL f$£z~ e.#L« BOARD OF TRUSTEES GREENVILLE HOSPITAL SYSTEM Mr. Herman N. Hipp PiVSiaont. Liberty Lite Insurance Company executive Vica-Piesttteni,liberty Corporation MARSHALL I. PICKENS HOSPITAL GREENVILLE HOSPITAL SYSTEM GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA 70-31 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] - L ~ ^ GREENVILLE M a r c h SO, NEWS 1970 GREENVILLE Greer Unit Of Hospital Gives Report March 1970 Directors Elected For Urban League A 33-member board of directors was elected Monday to complete formation of a local chapter to the national Urban League. The Rev. Ed Dixon was elected temporary chairman to convene the board Feb. 11, at the Birnie Street YWCA at 8 p.m. The board members were elected from a slate presented by the nine-member nominating [committee headed by Robert Anderson. Members represented youth, legal services, organizations, ieducation, business and community. Elected were Horace Butler, Mrs. Mary Thompson, the Rev. David Hellams, the Rev. D. C. Francis, Dr. W. S. Gandy and Sam Zimmerman, community; Theo Mitchell and Sol Abrams, legal services; S h e r w o o d T h o m p s o n and P e t e r Hungerford, youth; Mrs. Alberta Crimes, A. M. Anderson and Dr. Ernest E. Harrill, education. Organizations representatives ire Mrs. E. Calhoun Haskell, r unior League; Mrs. John Piper, The Allen-Bennett Memorial Hospital at Greer, one of the six hospitals of the Greenville Hospital System, recorded a total of 4,076 discharges for fiscal year 1969, in its 1969 annual report. Robert L. S m i t h , administrator, reported a total of 5,470 emergency room visits, 705 births, 5,372 X - r a y s examinations, 39,404 laboratory tests and a total of 50,576 adult patient days. Smith reported that community pressures are great on diognostic and t r e a t m e n t facilities at the hospital which has 63 beds and serves a thriving community with an area population of about 4 5,00 0 persons. Allen-Bennett was the first hospital division opened of the hospital system in 1953. The adjoining unit, the Roger Huntington Nursing C e n t e r , which was opened in April, 1963, has a waiting list of patients sseeking care. THE NEWS GREENVILLE NEWS SERVICE AWARDS — W. W. McEachern, left, chairman of the Greenville Hospital System board of trustees, presents a plaque to Mrs. Wilson C. Wearn for her husband, retiring board chairman, and Robert E. Toomey, director of the hospital system, right, April League of Women Voters; Mrs. Helen Anderson, Links, Inc.; the Rev. N. J. Brockman, Christian Ministers A s s o c i a t i o n ; a representative of the National Alliance of Business Men; Mrs. Alice Weber, mental health; Dr. W. F. Loggins, Office of Economic Opportunity; Robert E. Toomey, Greenville Hospital System; Al Motley, labor; and a representative of the Greenville Housing Foundation. B u s i n e s s representatives: Harrison Reardon, Bill Woodson, Mell Doolittle, Tom Carey, Eddie Garrett, W. D. Searles, Joe Allman and representatives of Burlington Industries, Daniel Construction Co. and Yeargin Construction Co. 1970 presents a plaque to James H. Woodside, retiring board member. The awards for community service were made Monday night at the annual trustee banquet. (Greenville News photo by Bennie J. Granger) 70-32 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE April 7, 1970 GREENVILLE April NEWS NEWS 9, 1970 Radiologic Meeting Set Today DR. RIVES CHALMERS Ministers To Hear Psychiatrist Dr. Rives Chalmers, Atlanta psychiatrist, will be featured participant in the second annual Pastoral Care Institute scheduled April 13-14 at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital on Grove Road. "Ministering to the Total Person" will be the theme of the institute sponsored by tha chaplain's department of Greenville General Hospital. Chalmers, native of Virginia, received his medical degree from the University of Virginia Medical School and began practice in Atlanta following service with the U.S. Navy Medical Corps. He is an active member of the Fulton County Medical Society, American M e d i c a l Association and Atlanta Psychiatric Clinic and a member of the Board of Directors of the Georgia Association for Pastoral Care. He is a fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, chairman of the Professional A d v i s o r y Committee of the Atlanta Mental Health Association and coc h a i r m a n of the Northside Branch of the Georgia Council on Human Relations. Chaplain John Smith of G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital said Chalmers will speak at the morning and afternoon sessions and will be speaker at the banquet Monday at 7:30 p.m. Registration for the Pastoral Care Institute, expected to attract ministers within a 50 mile radius of Greenville, begins Tuesday. Reservations are requested by April 8. i The 24th annual convention of the South Carolina Society of Radiologic Technologists will open Thursday at the Poinsett Hotel. The state organization is affiliated with the American Society of Radiologic j Technologists. Membership includes x - r a y technologists, radiation therapy technologists and nuclear medicine technologists. The three-day convention Will include presentation of scientific papers, exhibits, r e f r e s h e r courses and guest lecturers as well as tours of area radiologic facilities. The program faculty includes Dr. Mark Brown, University of Georgia Medical School; Robert L. Coyle, R. T., College of DuPage; James C. Ohnysty, R. ,T., Greenville TEC; Richard A. Olden, R. T., Johns Hopkins Hospital; and Dr. James B. Pressley, Greenville General Hospital. Joyce B. Clarkson, R. T., Greenville General Hospital, is chairman of the a n n u a l meeting. G R E E N V I L L E NEWS A p r i l 10, 1970 Sir, Your New 'Son9 Is Your Daughter... By LUCILLE B. GREEN News Staff Writer A Greenville County couple are the somewhat confused parents of a little girl, born Tuesday a t Greenville General Hospital. But from Tuesday until Thursday afternoon they were under the Impression t h a t they were proud parents of a little son, their first-born. Thursday night a hospital spokesman said t h a t "without a shadow of a doubt, backed up by blood and laboratory tests, we are certain t h a t the couple's baby is a girl." And the spokesman added, "We know h u m a n errors do occur, even in a hospital and in a delivery room." Tuesday night when the attending physician officiating at the delivery slapped the little baby into life he clearly announced t h a t lt was a little girl. But, as events have been reconstructed a t the hospital, a nursing aide in the delivery room reached into the drawer where the beaded bracelets denoting sex are kept and attached a boy's bracelet on the wrist of the little girl. And a similar a n d matching band was placed on t h e mother's wrist. Then a nursing aide carried the infant to the nursery and stopped at the Stork Club (the waiting room for expectant fathers) t o tell the father t h a t he had a son. Her cue was the boy's bracelet and she had no reason to doubt it. Two hours later the mother saw the baby — with the little boy's bracelet of identification. Wednesday, the infant was brought to the mother again, still with the boy's identification bracelet. Thursday, in the nursery, somebody discovered t h a t the boy's bracelet did not m a t c h the child's physical characteristics. The mother was notified t h a t her "son" was a daughter a n d she apparently accepted the explanation without becoming upset. Then the father was notified by telephone t h a t his "son" is a daughter. The hospital spokesman Thursday night stressed t h a t the child h a d been identified a t birth by the delivering physician as a girl; t h a t t h e child's blood a n d t h a t of t h e mother were a perfect m a t c h ; t h a t further tests Thursday i n , the laboratory indicate t h a t the blood of the mother and child are identical "thus providing conclusive proof t h a t the right child is ,with the right mother." In addition every child a n d every mother are given matching numbers and "all the babies' numbers match those- of the mothers, so there isn't a shadow of a doubt t h a t all the babies are with the right mothers." 70-33 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS April 10, 1970 Hospital Administrator Cuts Down Waiting Time For Patients In Clinic By JACK NORRIS option of coming in one day News Staff Writer for tests and returning the next New schedules, more intake for a talk with the doctor, but windows, and b e t t e r com- many have a serious transportamunication between the patient, tion problem and find it easier the referral agency and hospital to wait than to return a second staff should cut down clinic time, Goff said. waiting and frustration time, He said the diabetic patient David W. Goff, assistant ad- is asked not to eat breakfast ministrator of i n t e r n a l until blood and urine samples operations for G r e e n v i l l e are taken, but that most who General Hospital, said Thurs- come for the day do bring a sandwich from home or change day. "We were in error having pa- with which to buy a snack from tients check in at the clinic the vending machine. at 8 a.m.; the new registration Patients do sometimes stand time is 9 a.m. or 10 a.m.," in line to see the doctor but each is given a number as soon he said. Goff explained that doctors as he is registered for the day who man most of the clinics and those who stand rather than make hospital calls early in the sit are usually ones "that just morning and usually are not don't trust anybody," he said. able to get to clinics before He said that the clinic intake 10 to 10:30 a.m., but that considerable preliminary w o r k often is required before the patient is ready to see the doctor. In the past, most of those who came early in the morning and were not seen until afternoon were w i t h o u t appointments and had to be "worked in" between previously scheduled patients, Goff said. He said that of 120 patients seen in a day at the clinic as many as 50 may have walked in without an appointment. Another problem area has been the diabetic clinic where the patient often stays most of the day, but the diabetic has to have blood and urine samples taken and subjected to laboratory tests before he is seen by the doctor. Patients are being given an 70-34 and payment windows will soon be increased from two to four and that this also will reduce standing in line. "We've had meetings with O.E.O. officials and w i t h Welfare Department staff within the past few weeks, and number of their complaints show up as communications problems," he said. Plans are far along for a clinic brochure which will be distributed to all welfare agencies and the hospital is investigating the possibility of furnishing clinic patients with an information receptionist who can help direct them and answer questions, Goff said. Goff said that there is a basic charge of $2 for a clinic visit and that 95 per cent of those who come pay this, although no one is refused service because of lack of funds. He said fees are charged also for ancilary services such as x-rays, and blood tests, but that the amount charged is only a percentage of the r e g u l a r price. He said about half the patients served by one or more of the hospital's 31 clinics last year were sponsored by some agency, but that it cost the hospital $150,000 to serve the others. Looking to the future, Goff said the hospital is considering setting up an afternoon schedule for the general clinic but that a staffing problem must resolved. He said also that, when and if, proposed n e i g h b o r h o o d medical clinics become reality, patient waiting will be reduced still more. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS SCSRT OFFICERS — Officers elected and installed at the 24th annual convention of the S. C. Society of Radiologic Technologists here Saturday are from left: Peggy Bradley, R. T., treasurer; Jennifer Matthews, R. T., April 12, 1970 secretary; Shirley McDaniel, R. T., presidentelect; L. F. Pearson, R. T., vice-president; and Tom Griggs, R. T., president. (Greenville News photo by Cecil Hare) Radiologic Technology Educator Cautions Against Low Standards An educational director in a spector of radiology schools, school of radiologic technology said the lowering of training cautioned professionals in the standards for leveling off field against the current desire salaries will depend on pressure of introducing training levels from the Department of Health, below standard requirements to Education and Welfare t o meet t h e "unsubstantiated recognize the legality of pracshortage" of radiologists. titioners with less than the twoRobert Coyle, r a d i o l o g i c year requirements for radiologic technologist at the College of technologists, and the quality DuPage, Chicago, El., and mem- of training programs introduced ber of the board of directors by the two-year colleges and of the American Society of vocational education centers. Radiologic Technologists, ad- He said the trend is an dressed the final session of the "unrealistic approach" w i t h 24th annual convention of the wastage that will override any S. C. Society of Radiologic savings primarily because the Technologists. "great Shortage" has never been Coyle said the trend toward proven. creating lower levels of educa- The South Carolina schools, tion for assistants and aids to he said, are capable of producprofessionals would lead only ing enough technologists for the to a similar situation that oc- state and that the R. T. is curied before 1960 in which low not yet willing to accept the salaries attracted many un- idea that a shortage exists qualified persons rather than the here. professionals. According to surveys, he said, He said the trend is based shortages vary in all health ocon the desire to stablize salaries cupations with each state but but the outcome could result causes for the shortages have in a tremendous rise in cost not been determined. in patient care with waste and To stablize the corps of health inefficiencies not just to the occupation professionals, he said radiology departments. the salaries must be made atTh& radiologic technologists tractive to men to encourage are the management of tnat them at staff levels. He said field and should be the ones 86 per cent of all management to determine which is the most and instructors in the field are expedient type of training re- men but few remain at staff quired for best delivery of pa- levels. tient care, he said. 70-35 Coyle, an accreditation in- Speaking of South Carolina's radiology schools, Coyle said the state's training centers for radiologic technologists have "quality and enthusiastic staffs" at the technical e d u c a t i o n centers and schools "to provide the brand of patient care for South Carolina." Whether or not the community college will 'become the mode in heal* occupation training, he said, has not been determined though their training programs for the two-year professionals are increasing. The Saturday banquet concluded the three-day convention at the Poinsett Hotel. Sessions were also conducted at Greenville Technical Education Center Health Careers Center. Joyce Clarkson, R. T., Greenville General Hospital, was annual meeting chairman. Officers installed at the banquet were L. F. Pearson, R. T., vice president; Tom Griggs, R. T., president; S h i r l e y McDaniel R. T., president elect; Jennifer Matthews, R. T . , secretary; and Peggy Bradley, R. T., treasurer. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE April PIEDMONT Psychiatrist To Address Institute PIEDMONT 14, 1970 Deal With 'Whole Person,' Pastors Told At Institute By GIL ROWLAND counselling and treating a Ministers and psychiatrists man and wife or members should deal more with the of a whole family together. total person in t r e a t i n g Dr. Chalmers d i s c u s s e d specific problems, an Atlanta more effective use of marpsychiatrist told 80 persons riage, family, church, comat Monday night's opening munity, school and business session of the annual Pastoral in helping the individual to Care Institute. function 'better in the Dr. Rives Chalmers said the system. concept of the total person In responding to the talk, aids understanding and makes Rev. James M. Pitts, assistant the use of kiiowledge more Furman University chaplain, emphasized the importance of effective. O v e r - specialization in doctors, ministers and others medicine can cause the doctor concerned with people to to lose sight of the human "know, accept and trust each other." being involved, he said. He said we need "a bridge The speaker suggested more emphasis on health a n d over the troubled water" to strength and less on pathology make life better in "a in helping another person fragmented, dehu m a n i z e d overcome a problem o r world filled with alienation and 'lostness' ". disease. Dr. Roy J. Ellison, chief Advantages were cited in GREENVILLE April 13, 1970 April 13, 1970 THE GREENVILLE THE NEWS of the department of psychiatry and medical director at Marshall P i c k e n s Hospital, emphasized t h e ; challenge made by D r . Chalmers. Group leaders for today's session at the hospital are Rev. Verlin E. B a r n e t t , chaplain of the South Carolina Baptist Hospital; Rev. Will Manley, c o o r d i n a t o r of pastoral services for the Area Mental Health C e n t e r ; Thomas Kirby, principal of the Marshall I. P i c k e n s C h i l d r e n ' s Re-Education Center; Charles Hart, Marshall Pickens director of social, service; Rev John M. Smith.; Greenville General Hospital j chaplain. The institute is sponsored by the chaplain's department of Greenville General Hospital. 1 Dr. Rives Chalmers, an Atlanta psychiatrist, will address physicians and ministers at a banquet Monday p r e c e d i n g opening of the second annual Pastoral Care Institute at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital Tuesday. Dr. Chalmers will speak on "Our Concern for the Total Person" and response will be given by Dr. Roy J. Ellison, chief, department of psychiatry, Greenville Hospital System and Rev. James M. Pitts, assistant chaplain, Furman University. Some 80 physicians a n d ministers are expected to attend the two day institute sponsored by the chaplain's department at Greenville General Hospital. John M. Smith is chaplain. Theme for the institute will be "Ministering to the Total Person". All sessions will be held at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital on Grove Road. Registration will begin Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. Chalmers will speak on "The Minister as a Total Person" at the morning session and "How the Concept of the Total Person Affects One's Approach to Ministry" following lunch. Discussion group leaders will be the Rev. Verlin E. Barnett, chaplain, Baptist Hospital, Columbia; the Rev. W i l f o r d Manley, coordinator of pastoral services, Greenville Area Mental Health Center; Thomas Kirby. principal, Children's ReEducation Center, Marshall I. Pickens Hospital; Charles Hart, director of social s e r v i c e , Marshall Pickens Hospital; and Chaplain Smith. 70-36 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Tours Hospital Dr. Swie Hing Go, right, a physician from Djakarta, Indonesia, talks with Dr. Robert E. T o o m ey, director of the Greenville Hospital System, this morning as she begins an inspection tour of Greenville General Hospital. Dr. Go is in the United States on a twa-year grant from the National I n s t i tute of Mental.Health at Rockland State Hospital in Orangeburg, N. Y. She is with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Indonesia. While i n Greenville, Dr. Go is the house guest of Mr. a n d M r s . J o h n Cosby. (Piedmont Photo by Fletcher W. iRoss) THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT A p r i l 14, 1970 INSTITUTE CONCLUDED Psychological Counselors Run Risk Of Personal Involvement By MIRIAM GOODSPEED [Center and to the Division of in the world around us. (Earlier Story on Page 14) j Vocational Rehabilitafion in "Our aggression can be a lovGa., where he also is ing constructive force, or it can One of the greatest dangers Atlanta, in private The former be a destructive one," the doctor in psychological counseling is vestryman practice. of St. Luke's getting too personally involved Church, he is the reci- explained, adding that to be with the patient, Dr. Rives Episcopal of the Aven Award for effective one had to seek mobiliChalmers warned ministers at- pient Citizenship, tending an annual pastoral care Society, 1956.Fulton M e d i c a l ty and learn to control his aginstitute at Marshall I. Pickens The psychiatrist pointed out gression. Dr. Chalmers said people need Hospital this morning. that it is quite usual for "There are important moral hysterically oriented persons to relationships to sustain and limits which must be observed become keenly aware of the provide the framework of life! in the relationship between needs of others with whom they and that the concept of sexuality counselors and patients," he told relate, especially those acting is probably the most readily the group attending the institute, in a counselor capacity, and apparent one in recognition of "Ministering To the T o t a l that it is important to have self. In this way one develops! Person," which opened last limits beyond which one does sexual identity and comes to understand one's own life and night. The seminar ended this not move. afternoon after an a 11 - d a y He said that to become an those about him. session at the hospital. It was effective counselor one must He pointed out that sick people sponsored by the Chaplain's realize and recognize one's own are very vulnerable a n d dependent, and that "they focu.s Department of G r e e n v i l l e personal needs and feelings. on us to satisfy needs we don't General Hospital.' "Humans are active, agDr. Chalmers is a psychiatric gressive beings with forces in- always understand . . . they consultant to the Children's side which establish meaning see us as they want us to be. not as we are." How does the counselor keep himself from fragmenting if he cannot avoid becoming involved? THE GREENVILLE NEWS "If one becomes aware his integrity is being threatened, he A p r i l 15, 1970 should get out and let another counselor take over," Dr. Chalmers told his audience. Individual group discussions concluded the morning session. Minister-Psychiatrist Discusses Pastoral Care "Becoming aware of ourselves as total persons unfortunately doesn't mean we have gotten rid of all our hangups," a minister attending a session of the annual l1 Pastoral Care Institute, said here Tuesday. The session at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital was directed by Dr. Rives Chalmers, a psychiatrist from Atlanta, Ga., who is a frequent speaker at minister's workshops due to his interest in the problems of ministers. The institute is sponsored by the Chaplain's Department of Greenville General Hospital. Chalmers stressed that the pastoral counselor should be 'aware of his own fears and needs so that, although he becomes involved in the counseling he does not go past the point where he loses control of himself or of the counseling situation. "Nothing is more destroying to the individual than to feel the compelling determination of the counselor to get the patient well." he said. "We are there to be what we are, to render all the service we know how, but we must also be prepared to fai " he said. The individual coming to the counselor for aid may be smiling outwardly, but often is inwardly in great anguish, he said. Because of this, "he does not see us as the person we are but as the person that he wants us to be," Chalmers said. He urged pastors, at the same time, not to make matters worse by satisfying their own needs to play a "motherly or supportive role" to the extent that they make the insecure individual afraid to give up his symptoms for fear of losing the counselor's support. 70-37 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS April 15, 1970 G R E E N V I L L E NEWS A p r i l 16, 1970 Nursing School Sets Graduation RECLINING COMFORT—Patients at the Roger Huntington Nursing Center at Greer will he able to convalesce comfortably using this recliner donated to the center by the Junior Volunteers, headed by Miss Debra Wbittington, left, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E. Whittington. Mrs. Stanley S. Addy man, direcor of nursing at the center, and Robert L. Smith, administrator of the center and Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital, accept the gift. (Greenville News photo by Fletcher W. Ross) 70-38 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville County School of Practical Nursing will have commencement exercises Friday at 8 p.m. in Greenville High School with Dr. Frank F. Espey, local neurosurgeon, as guest speaker. Dr. M. T. Anderson, superintendent, will also participate on the program Vocal music will be given by Mrs. June Rives. Class officiers are Miss Judy Clark, president; Mrs. Helen Stewart, vice president; Mrs. Shirley Harmon, secretary; Mrs. Linda Godfrey, treasurer; Mrs. Helen Payne, chaplain; and Mrs. Gwendolyn Tyler, social chairman. Graduates include: Mrs. Linda Bishop, Miss Marcelle Blassingame, Mrs. Sue Chemell, Miss Clark, Miss Cynthis Gary, Mrs. Linda Godfrey, Mrs. Joanna Hand, Mrs. Harmon, Mrs. Audrey Henderson, Mrs. Payne, Mrs. Annie Richards, Mrs. Betty Strange, Mrs. Tyler, Mrs. Doris Winchester, all of Greenville; Mrs. Ca/lon Hawkins, Travelers Rest; Miss Mary Langston, Mountain Rest; Mrs. Juanita Ramos, Greer; Alan Riedel, Piedmont; Mrs. S t e w a r t , Taylors; and Miss J a n e Williams, Easley. THE GREENVILLE April 2 8 , 1970 THE PIEDMONT April GHS Comes Under Scrutiny . Of English, Aussie Officials By MIRIAM GOODSPEED new hospital, and the way we The Greenville H o s p i t a l are operating today," Ferris System is falling under the added. scrutiny of both Australian and Armstrong was on a sixBritish hospital officials this month leave with pay from his position. week. W. Maurice Naylor, secretary Australian law directs that to the Sheffield R e g i o n a l every citizen there receives Hospital Board in Sheffield such a leave after 20 years on England will visit officials and a job, Ferris reported. facilities here on Wednesday and "He is making a round-theThursday. world tour of hospital systems, F. C. Armstrong, c h i e f and seemed very impressed with architect for the Hospitals and ours," the food service director Charities Commission of the said. state of Victoria, Melbourne, Naylor is making a special Australia, visited here Sunday study of the problems of local and Monday. organization of a unified health "Armstrong was primarily in- service. On a 12-month leave terested in our Anderson-Green- of absence to make the study, ville-Spartanburg Food System his main interests are in the (AGS)," explained Ezra Ferris, organization and management of director of food services at the health service, the training of hospital staffs and use of GHS. "He also expressed interest management techniques and in other organizational opera- systems in hospital organizations, construction plans for the tion. THE GREENVILLE April Radiologic Winners Announced Two Greenville students and an instructor in m e d i c a l programs have been announced as winners in c o m p e t i t i o n sponsored by the S. C. Society of Radiologic Technologists. Miss M a r g a r e t Anne McCarthy, radiologic technology instructor at G r e e n v i l l e Technical Education C e n t e r received a second place trophy for her staff paper "The Naylor is secretary, which is the chief administrative officer, to one of 14 boards in England responsible to the secretary of state for social services for the administration of the hospitals in its region. While here, the Englishman will speak to members of the Greenville Hospital System Internal Advisory Board on the programs, f a c i l i t i e s and management by objectives as he operates them in nis country. NEWS 29, 1970 GREENVILLE NEWS 16, 1970 Counseling By Pastors Improved, Doctor Says Ministers today are better true meaning of being alive, able to counsel parishoners in and can also support the doctrouble than ever before, Dr. tor's therapy by bringing «>i_t Rives Chalmers, psychiatrist, into the open an individual's fears of living or of death, he said here Tuesday. Chalmers, psychiatric consul- said. tant to the Children's Center "The minister can make peoand to the Division of Vocational ple see how their sickness can Rehabilitation in Atlanta, was be a time for taking stock; in Greenville addressing those he can also help an individual attending the annual Pastoral learn to take time off — in see that he has the Care Institute sponsored by the sfbort of ordering his life Chaplain's Department o f responsibility if he is to maintain his health," Greenville General Hospital. he said. Today p r a c t i c a l l y all The minister can also promote theological s e in ina r i e s en- communication with the sick or courage young ministers to help dying person, who often is reacin hospitals, he said ting to his illness as though "Because of the practice of he were isolated and alone. clinical training for seminary "He can open healthy comstudents most ministers today munication between members of are sensitive to the experience families at times of birth, of health, sickness and death sickness or death, and mainin a way that ties the minister's taining comimunication at such role into the healing process, times is particularly important he said. to the family, he said. "Doctors will tell you that The older adult l a y m a n , the person who has a feeling sometimes accepts the need tot of value for life is much more hypocrisy in meeting economic, likely to get well than one who social or personal problems, which can create ministers has lost it," he said. Today the minister may work which are arch hypocrites, be I j to help the individual find the said. Challenge of Mammography" on radiographic examination of the breasts. She also received a second place trophy for the exhibit "Hints for Mammograghy" which she exhibited at the 24th annual convention of SCRT. Paiila Cuthbertson, senior student, Greenville G e n e r a l Hospital, received third place student trophy for the paper, "Orbital Fractures." Tonya Boulware junior student, GGH, received third place student trophy for her exhibit "The Psychedelic Knee". GREENVILLE April PIEDMONT 30, 1970 Keeping Informed r 70-39 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Mrs. Miriam Goodspeed May I sincerely express my appreciation for your coverage of the Pastoral Care Institute, held on April 14th. Without the help of persons like yourself it would be impossible for us to keep the community informed of the various activities and programs provided in our community. JOHN M. SMITH Chaplain GreenviUe General Hospital THE GREENVILLE NEWS A p r i l 23, 1970 League Studies Health, Religion Health resources and religious opportunities in Greenville were outlined for provisional members of the Junior League of Greenville, Inc., Monday at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital by Dr. R. W. Penick, director of the Greenville C o u n t y Health Department; Dr. Robert E. Toomey, d i r e c t o r of the Greenville General Hospital System; the Rev. Charles Blanck, assistant to the rector of Christ Church, and Frank Pinckney, administrator of the Marshall I. Pickens facility. Hospital once was an autonomous unit providing care for only the acutely ill, it is now concerned with all the sick people in the community and is providing a variety of facilities through a decentralized multi-unit system, he said. Dr. Penick said many Greenvillians are not aware of the services a v a i l a b l e at the County Health Department. Close checks are kept on reported cases of communicable diseases through the Epidemiology Department to prevent epidemics he said. Two nurses work with the turbeculosis program, following up all X-rays ai.' skin tests made by the county, he explained. A control register of all previous cases is also maintained. He offered as an example, the patient with a broken hip who does not need extensive treatment. He now can be hospitalized^ at much lower cost. Greensville G e n e r a l Hospital employs 2,000 people and offers many s p e c i a l medical services, Dr. Toomey said. transplants,'" he observed. The Rev. Mr. B l a n c k presented ..a outline o f religious sects from earliest Christianity up to the 20th century. Many denominations we have today are the result of "who has the authority, not the doctrine," he said. receive Communion regardless of religious sect in all churches universal." Toomey believes an inHi emphasized that all tegrated hospital system I ased on the degree of illness Christian churches hold the of the patient will allow the same basic belief: "Christ system to relate the cost of was the Savior of the world and the Son of God." services to the charges. Greenville has more than 400 churches representing 28 faiths, he said. Southern Baptists constitute the largest group with 82 churches. According to Blanck, the complexity of religious viewpoints are many, but the important part is "you; what you think, what you feel, and how you relate God's love in this world today." Blanck said he felt "the day of denominations is coming to an end and one will Pinckney concluded t h e program with a tour of the v Marshall Pickens hospital. "We are able to provide any medical service except The Department of Vital Records, he said, keeps files of all births and deaths in the county. The health department also has an extensive immunization program and participates in a maternal and infant care program, with help in family planning offered. "The function of the health department is to regard the community as a patient," the doctor said. Dr. Toomey spoke on the six units of the Greenville General Hospital S y s t e m where more than 50 per cent of Greenville County's population will receive service this year. While Greenville General HEALTH IS ISSUE — Junior League Provisionals, from left, Mrs. Henry O. Robertson, Mrs. E. Darrell Jervey, Mrs. James Earle Huffman, Miss Patricia Conway and Mrs. George R. Cousar hear Dr. Robert Toomey, director of the • Greenville General Hospital System, explain health services the system provides. The group met at the new Marshall "1. by Cecil Hare) Pickens Hospital. (Greenville News photo to 7(M0 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS May 1, 1970 G R E E N V I L L E NEWS May 2, 1970 Nursing Classes To Begin MENTAL HEALTH MONTH BEGINS — Members of the Greenville County Mental Health Association, from left, J. D. Henry, mental health membership chairman; Mrs. Betty K. Sullivan, city membership chairman; and David A. Merline, president-elect, meet Thursday with Mrs. Joan Roper, director of psychiatric nursing at Marshal I. Pickens Hospital, to call attention to services available at the hospital and at the Greenville Mental Health Center and to National Mental Health Month which begins Friday. (Greenville News p h o t o by Bennie J. Granger) Mental 'Health Month Chairman Explains Treatment Facilities There is hope, "real hope" to- tor deal with the symptoms of volunteeers will seek n e w i day for millions of Americans nervous disorders are resulting members for the local organizasuffering from disabling mental in far fewer persons having to tion, Merline said. disorders, David A. Merline, be sent away for extended Greenville Mental Health Month periods to state mental Chairman, said Thursday. hospitals," he said. "Although Greenville is e s p e c i a l l y pressures of living today seem fortunate, Merline said, in hav- to create much e m o t i o n a l ing excellent treatment facilities distress, many can get the for both youth and adults suf- therapy and attention they need al a local facility such as our fering from such disorders. own Greenville Mental Health "Most persons think first of Center," he said. adults when they consider mental illness, but mental illness af- Merline said the Greenville fects many children, too," he Mental Health Association also is sponsoring special events to pointed out. highlights N a t i o n a l Mental He said there are hundreds of Health Month which is the ithousands of young children and month of May. adolescents suffering from men- One is a perforanee of "The tal disorders and that about Concept," tentatively scheduled 55,000 are admitted to mental here May 7. The play is hospitals each year with very performed by a group of youths serious mental illness. who are fighting drug addiction Meriine said an important with apparent success. function of the Greenville Coun- There will aiso be a panel ty Mental Health Association is discussion of county mental to make people aware of the health resources here May 19; a treatment facilities available at bus trip to Columbia May 22 to the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital attend a coffee at the governor's facility for all age groups and manion where mental heall i for those who may require in-pa- problems will be discussed, anc tient and outpatient services. to visit 'the S. C. Merita1 "Improved therapy and newly Hospital; and May 24, National developed drugs to help .the doc- Mental Health Sunday, local 70-41 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville County School of Practical Nursing will begin its next class June 15, Mrs. HuKate Elwood, director, said Friday. Tests for admittance to the course will be given May 5 and 19 at the school at 205 Anderson St. Tests will begin at 7:45 a.m. and continue until about 3 p.m., Mrs. Elwood said. Persons interested in attending the course may take the tests on either date. There will be no other testing dates, Mrs. Elwood said. Anyone between the ages of 17 and 45 who has completed at least two years of high school is eligible. THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT May 2, 1970 British Health Official Visits Here; English Costs Explained By MIRIAM GOODSPEED . For only $32 each a yeltr on an average, E n g 1 i s4icitizens are c o m p l e t e l y covered in their health needs, including all hospitalization costs. How do they do it? They pay for it through general' taxation, e x p l a i n e d W.•_ Maurice Naylor, secretary to the Sheffield Regional Hospital. Board in Sheffield, England. A Naylor visited the Greenville Hospital System Wednesday and Thursday to study the problems of local organization of a unified health service. He is on a 12-month leave; of absence to make the study* on organization and management of health s e r v i c e s ; training of hospital staffs and use of management techniques and systems in h o s p i t a l organization. "When I began making inquiries about coming to the United States on this study, a number of people advised me to come to Greenville to visit your facility here," be.; "YOU HAVE the reputation; \ of having a very comprehensive hospital system as well as a very full range of hospital services in an integrated sort of way. "I found my visit here very profitable a n d interesting, especially the spirit of close cooperation between hospital authorities and town doctors," he added. Naylor said that problems faced by the medical community are very much the same in both England and America — need for more nurses and p h y s i c i a n s , especially in the field of general practice. As in America, he said, most young internists are going into s p e c i a l i z e d medicine rather than into practice as family doctors. In England, one pays fairly high taxes, the administrative officer explained, but more is provided the average citizen by the government there than in the United States. -issigned to them under conWhen an; Englishman, "THE AVERAGE wage in make tract from their offices. an office visit, he oi England is about $48 per weedy has to wairtive to 10 minul -Naylor said that many of but the cost of living is- mucn^ j them in groups of up to 10 see his doctor. lower there than here," he to"Our doctors work on an are practicing together. They explained. I appointment basis," Naylor ; jr^fer patients to specialists A member of the pro- • explained. '«wnen hospitalization is needfessional c l a s s m a k i n g ed, "One of our main problems $12,000 per year, with two in England is the need for - "GP's make on an average children, can expect to pay more home services, because : af. $13,000 yearly, w h i l e $2,400 in taxes, he said. Not too many are admitted to ^Hospital specialists bejse pay, only is there government tax, much the same. The but there are also property hospitals who don't need to rjsi'<pretty er, however, can get merit taxes used for local needs be there," he said. irds and also some priv and a purchase or sales tax :ctice, alI~oT wbi HEALTH SERVICE costs on all goods. eases their average to are increasing more rapidly r "With our plan of socialized, 'than any other service, the. -•$30,000 per year," he said. medicine, our people pay for British g o v e r n m e n t : Naylor left Greenville for health services when they are discovering, and there iiis_jg| a short trip through the Blue well, not when they are sick," ^'shortage of trained perso: . Jtidge Mountains to Nashville. Naylor said. He added thatj with too much emphasis He plans to continue his about 99 per cent of the ! .hospital care rather than com s t u d i e s in C h i c a g o , population of 4 8 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . munity or home nursing csfe Washington and Albany. Mrs. persons finance their health.' he said. Naylor will meet him in services in such a manner. ^ ^ K g t o n , and the couple General practitioners do noi "While there is about 1 per I practice in hospitals f~ planning a vacation later cent who still prefer 'to con- England, mmer in British Columbut they ps tract privately for health I medical services to pa services,' they still have to pay the taxes,"' he added. •He said that every patient has his own family doctor and that it is quite usual for the physician there to visit a patient in his home. m Discussing similar health needs of England and the United States are, Jack A. Skarupa, left, director of operations of the Greenville Hospital System; Maurice Naylor, hospital ad- ministrator of Sheffield, England; and Dr. Raymond C. Ramage, director of medical education for GHS. (Piedmont photo by Bennie Granger) 70-42 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE Kidd Steers Beginning GREENVILLE May NEWS 3 , 1970 Services To Alcoholics Come Slowly By JACK NORRIS News Staff Writer Keenly aware of the plight of alcoholics and of their cost to society, B. R. Kidd, semiretired and a non-alcoholic member of the board of the Greenville Information Center on Alcoholism, began thinking of coordination of efforts within the community. This could result, he thought, in medical service for the acutely d r u n k , r e h a b i l i t a t i o n for the detoxified alcoholic, and additional supportive services to help him re-establish himself in society. As a member of the White, Blue and Red Corp., (AA groups are not allowed by charter to own any property and even a meeting facility which such a group owns must THE May belong to a separate corporate entity) Kidd knew the strengths and weaknesses of local AA groups, and that AA, although the best answer to date for those with a serious drinking problem, finds itself unable to reach many persons. At his own expense, he began to visit communities in other states where specialized or coordinated a g e n c i e s dealing with the problem were getting c o n s i d e rable publicity. >i He visited, the alcoholic rehabilitation and research center in Mfemphis, Tenn.; spent time studying t h e "Halfway House" program in Atlanta, Ga.; and went to St. Louis, Mo., the first large city in the nation where police took drunks to a detoxification unit GREENVILLE 3, In a local hospital instead of to jail. "I found no place that had all the answers and none which had a strong program in all three areas of need — detoxification, rehabilitation, and a halfway house facility," Kidd said. With unflagging zeal and determination, Kidd pursued the problem of providing with tax funds a rehabilitation facility here with which to attack the disease classified by the national health service as the fourth most deadly in the nation. He learned about t h e Holmesview Detention Center for Juvenile O f f e n d e r s , recently phased out by the Greenville County Legislative Delegation, and enlisted aid from the South C a r o l i n a Commission on Alcoholism and from the South Carolina Department of Rehabilitation, as well as from Greenville groups. In Kidd's favor was a recent court decision which seemed to indicate that . soon law officers could not commit an individual to jail s i m p l y because he is inebriated and state agencies gave a n attentive ear to his proposals. His efforts, coupled with support from others, resulted in establishment of t h e G r e e n v i 1 le Rehabilitation Center for Alcoholism at the Holmesview facility and a state-administered f e d e r a l grant of more than $100,000 to staff and operate it the first year. A five-member Greenville County C o m m i s s i o n on Alcoholism was f o r m e d , groups and for those who may r e quire in-patient and out-patieht services. The hospital and the. Greenville Mental Health Center are symbols of the new era of enlightenment ln treating mentalillness. NEWS 1970 Celebrating Mental Health David A. Merline GreenviUe South Carolina has made gre^t strides in providing facilities fidIMental' Hearth Month c h a i n t r e a t its citizens suffering fromiIwas right when he said t h a t t h i disabling mental disorders. The area is especially fortunate in h a v month of May has been designated ing excellent t r e a t m e n t facilities as a time to review the progress for- both youth a n d adults with ln mental health, and to focus', niental disorders. The availability locally of such facilities cannot on the needs of the future. be stressed enough. The Marshall I. Pickens Hospital provides t r e a t m e n t for all age New J o r m s of t r e a t m e n t , indern'cfrugs to help doctors tn lervous disorders are resultlni iwer persons having to b e j Fay for extended periods T ^ ihental hospitals. The state's H panding network of mental health centers h a s done much to n f l ^treatment easier and more fea: for many people who need but in no sense need to be away." charged with the responsibility The c o m m i s s i o n has of dealing with problems of persisted in its e f f o r t s alcohol abuse and control. however, and within the past The commission worked to month, Greenville General create m o r e coordination Hospital, despite c h r o n i c among programs already in overcrowding, has made a operation and to find some small five-bed ward available way of establishing a with staff to operate it. Here, detoxification unit w h i c h those anxious to really kick might be used to "dry out" alcoholic addiction can get the highly i n e b r i a t e d their foot on the first rung individual not able financially of the ladder. to pay his way to a private sanitarium. Because the ward is In general, neither medical small, members of the practitioners, psychiatrists, or commission are seeking a way nurses, enjoy working with to evaluate the alcoholic's drunks. chances f o r rehabilitation Drunks are apt to be" before assigning him to one d e m a n d i n g , rude, and of the few beds available. intractable and, with all three "With scores of individuals medical groups able to stay constantly in need of a place busy working with more for detoxification and only five amenable patients, it is human beds available the question of nature to resist involvement priorities is most important," with the inebriated. Kidd stressed. . We have come a long way, and there is good cause for some celebration during Mental Health Month. But there ls much still to be done. " More people need t o be made aware of the t r e a t m e n t available right a t their backdoor. This ls one of the big jobs of the Greenville Mental Health Association, a n d it ls one of the most Important jobs involved ln helping citizens crippled by mental disabilities. "_" During May the association ls nsoring special events to lghlight local mental health a c 'jtrities. These events d e s e r v e lie support because mental lth Involves us all. 70-43 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS GREENVILLE May 7, 1970 NEWS May 10, 1970 Letters To The Editor Trip Through City A Sad Experience I would like to thank the personnel at Greenville General Hospital for their thoughtful consideration and sympathy during the time we spent there at the death of my father, however, their kindness cannot make up for t h e heartache, fear and confusion we endured trying to find a hospital in a town we were unfamiliar with. We were traveling down Road 123 about five miles out of Greenville on March 15 coming home to Gastonia when my father suffered a fatal heart attack. We had traveled only a mile or so after he was taken ill when we saw a highway patrolman stationed on the side of the road with a whammie. We were so relieved because we thought we had found some help. We stopped and asked the patrolman to escort us to the hospital or call an ambulance. He refused, saying he would call a city policeman to lead us, for us to get back in the car and go straight ahead, and we would meet the policeman. But we never met any policeman at all. He pulled in behind us at the hospital and we had to get directions from people on the sidewalk. We explained to the highway patrolman that we thought it was a heart attack I and we feared he was dying, and that I we were unfamiliar with the town. He should have realized the danger iwe and other people would be in with our driving fast, running red lights and looking for a sign to the hospital which he said we would see. But there wasn't lone. We mentioned this to a nurse at the hospital and she told us there wasn't one bjut that they really needed one. • d on arYival £nd . maybe the highway patrolman cofildn't have saved his life. But-we sure would feel a lot safer the next time we take a trip if we had some cooperation from him. We always thought it was the duty of policemen to assist in such emergencies. DOYLE TALLENT Gastonia, N. C. HOSPITAL SUPPORT — Robert E. Toomey, director, Greenville Hospital System and president of the S. C. Hospital Association, accepts a statement commemorating observance of National Hospital Week May 10-16 from Gov. Robert E. McNair. National Hospital Week S.C Citizens Urged To Join Obs§ryance Gov. Robert E. McNair pledg- " "Today every hospital is faced ed his support for South with greater demands for high Carolina Hospitals and urged quality health care for more other South Carolinians to join people than ever," McNair said. the observance of National "The key word in this year's Hospital Week beginning Sufi- theme is 'cares.' This word focuses attention on the main day. that hospitals do indeed In a statement on the wefiS message care, that are ready_ to, long observance, M c N a i r meet today'sthey needs for-heal recognized the efforts hospitals care and are preparing to are making to preserve then the increasing., demands humanitarian tradition while k_- •**fli«rrow." c o r p o r a t i n g the latest developments in health care, fl Robert E. Toomey, Greenville Hospital System director, is Theme for the observance «S president of the South Carolina "Your Hospital Cares." Tt Hospital Association. focuses attention on w o r k hospitals are doing to meet increasing demands for health care in an era of spiraling costs and general inflation. The annual observance is sponsored by the American Hospital Association to give people an opportunity to learn more about the hospitals in their community. 70-44 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS HONORED TODAY - Mrs. Frederick Gibson James, Mrs. Edward Westmoreland Bailey and Mrs. John Louis Hunnicutt are being served refreshments by Mrs. James E. May 10, 1970 Fowler in the garden of Roger Huntington Nursing Center. (Greenville News photo by James G. Wilson) Nursing Center Honors Three GREER — Three guests at ithe Roger Huntington Nursing Center who are approaching their 97th, 98th and 99th birthdays will be singled out for special honors during the observance of Mother's Day. The residents will b e recognized as the o l d e s t mothers at the R o g e r Huntington Nursing Center and will receive corsages. They are Mrs. Kathryn Gainsey Bailey, 99, whose husband was the late Edward Westmoreland Bailey; Mrs. Susan Felicia Hunnicutt, 98, whose husband was the late John Louis Hunnicutt; and Mrs. Mamie Kendrick James, who will be 97 June 25, whose husband was the late Dr. Frederick Gibson James. 70-45 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] All are citizens of Greer. "Open House" will b e observed at the center Sunday, in connection with National Hospital Week, from 2 to 4 p.m., with a reception in the dining room in honor of all of the guests of the nursing center. GREENVILLE The Byrd B. Holmes chapter of the Guild of St. Barnabas se_i held its anr Flo^jffif. jNjghiingale' at Christ SriscopHBratMfth. A religious, cultural and social o r g a n i z a t i o n for registered nurses, licensed practical nurses and those interested in the medical p r o f e s s i o n , the guild recognized 19 new members at the ritual. Among them are Mrs. Laura NEWS_ . May 10, 1970 St. Barnabas Guild Accepts New Members Booth McCollum, a licensed practical nurse; and student nurses Mrs. John Dod, Miss Cindy Hill, Miss S u s a n Marlowe, Miss Shelby Anderson, Miss Ellen Meador, Miss Cathy Sutcliffe, Miss Janet Gold, Miss Cynthia Good, Miss Vivian Lyons, Miss Janice Hawkins and Miss Kathleen Doyle. Also, Miss Valrie Farnell, Miss Lynda Dubose, Miss M a l i n d a RECEIVE PINS — Eighteen student nurses and a licensed practical nurse received the St. Barnabas Guild pin during services at Christ Episcopal Church. The pin js a Murphree, Miss Sherry Duff, Miss Sue Hymes, Miss Faye Hodge, and Miss R e n a e Ruff. The service commemorated the founding of m o d e r n nursing and observed Florence Nightingale's birthday. She was born May 12, 1820 and died August 13, 1910. guild includes sponsoring a student nurse scholarship, maintaining a clothes closet for indigent mothers to take infants home from the hospital, aiding cerebral palsy victims and furnishing the chaplin's office and chapel at the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. Mrs. Milford A. Forrester of Greenville is national vice president. facsimile of the one given Florence Nightingale by Queen Victoria. (Greenville News photo by Fletcher W. Ross) 70-46 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS LEG INJURY — Ambulance attendants watch Dr. J. M. Holloway apply a traction splint on Mike Gregory during a May 10, 1970 training session for emergency medical personnel at Greenville TEC. (Greenville News photo Jby Leon E. Carnes) First Aid Reviewed In Training Ses$im$ bessinger said that legislation, of drivers others (training and a coordinated comTechnical Education Cfa&a_f "Ttltr^ fa f aid course or requii s Area emergency v e h i c l w >.- ^____E______________________________________________ 'Standard equipment in emergen- munications system between cy 'vehicles, Bessinger said. ambulances a n d emergency other other emergency medical at; States must conform to the stan- room staffs and I measures and new emergency 11 six dards for emergency health emergency vehicles will be t r a n s D o r a t i o s H ^ ' personnel in the medical Services under the act to be necessary if emergency needs developments "in an° d & H K ^ Appalachian area. for highway sa_etjfi|"of' tb> county and state are training session to prepare tos? B r . • D - B e s s u ) g e r Jr., eligible ^ ^ ^ B j l met. funds. the demands of- the sum • ^^^^^^-al surgeon, course instruction introduced ful spite of the inadequacies -Coordinator. Other was instructors season. e system, those involved Is and prospects included Dr. J. M. Holloway, Eighteen drivers and «§J senior orthopedic president; Dr. ^ ^ i e r e s t e d in upgrading and gency rescue in Si tendants from Greenville, Foun- Paul lina which i n c l u d e improving, Bessinger said. Meunier, chief orthopedic tain Inn" and Cherokee County resident; Dr. David Smith, bpters for medical evacuat , He expressed hope that adreviewed basic skills of splinting obstetrics and gynecology r, training p r o g r a m 4 \ ttjonal coordinated activities fractures, cardio - pulmonary dent; Dr. E. A. Weathers, n the medical a n d rgency medical technicians] resuscitation, bleeding control xgency personnel would in an i n t e g r a t e d coirifr; surgical resident; and Dr. D and child birth during the 20e similar training sessions ications system for hospital! | hour course dealing mainly with E. Wallar, chief emergi and that a curriculum for mobile emergency unity the major types of • injury ett< mom physician, all of Greeny; program is pending legisla emergency medical attendants countered in ambulance workiS C&pral Hospital; and Henr$. ttpld be developed by TEC based on ' ' M o dj manager, C a r o 1 i ters and two-year colleges^ The self-improvement coi^H fiance Ordinance ance Inc. of Columbia, was coordinated with the HRher legal and administri to the 1966 palachian Health Policy ^ B c t s of ambulance oper, wav Safety Act, ther* Planning Council and the He [JIB also covered. maWto?*Mt&L\ Careers Division of Greeny! 70-47 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS FLOWERS FOR NEW MOTHER — Mrs. Kilby Smith Page. Ill receives a traditional Mother's Day corsage at Greenville General Hospital. Giving it to her is Mrs. Eugene W. Stuart, "pink lady" volunteer, and with them May 10, 1970 is Miss Myrtle Long, R.N., area superviser of Obstetrics and pediatrics. The baby, Stacy. Alden Page, was born Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Page, who live at 8 Stonewall Lane. 70-48 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS May 11, 1970 Emphasizing Hospital Care "Hospital care" ls generally regarded as routine for most people ln cases of illness these days, a big switch from the era when only the d e s p e r a t e l y ill were hospitalized. Hospital care has taken over much of the service formerly rendered the sick ln their homes. Social, medical and economic changes, the advent of health insurance and the development of the welfare state have made hospitalization the standard way to treat people whenever they are more than slightly ill. All phases of hospitalization, especially the Soaring costs of b u i l d i n g , e q u i p p i n g and maintaining the Institutions have been receiving much attention in recent years as "hospital care" has come to be regarded as an inalienable right in the United States. It takes only a look at the facilities tn being and those u n d e r construction to show what is being done. But lt also is important to remember that lt takes people — highly skilled, dedicated people — to run hospitals and to meet the needs of the sick. The Greenville General Hospital System alone has a staff of about 1,750 employes. In 1969 there were two employes for every patient in the hospital system each day. Hospital Week 1970 affords an opportunity to take a look at facilities and services provided here and elsewhere. By comparison Greenville and the entire Piedmont region are fortunate. A recent television study of h o s p i t a l services ln the nation showed conditions In many areas, including big cities, far worse than anything in this region. As hospitals get bigger and more crowded and as equipment and techniques become more sophisticated, there is a growing feeling that hospitals are being dehumanized, with the Individual patients lost in a maze of charts and machines and highly specialized staff members. This area is blessed in several ways. There has been sound, farsighted planning for hospital facilities. The public has responded by supporting both public a n d private institutions. In Greenville, the General Hospital System and St. Francis Community Hospital are expanding and modernizing to keep pace with needs. The reverse is true. The patient actually gets more real individual attention than formerly, although often the sick person isn't aware of the care being received. He doesn't see all the work done in laboratories on his individual case. Secondly, facilities to train hospital technicians are available. These are vital to maintaining good hospital services in the region. It is fitting, therefore, that the hospitals are emphasizing t h e "caring" part of "hospital care" as they observe National Hospital Week this week. In recent years hereabouts it has been necessary to concentrate on the bricks and mortar considerations involved to provide adequate hospital care for the growing population of Greenville County and the Piedmont region. The hospitals and the public have worked diligently and successfully to plan and finance the hospital care institutions this area needs. Finally, a great many people, especially young people, in this area are interested in hospital care careers and are taking advantage of facilities offered. There are not yet enough to fill all demands, but neither does this region have a severe shortage of trained personnel. Hospital Week Is a good time for people in thi$-*rea to look at their hospitals and see what they are doing. It's also a good time for young people seeking worthwhile careers to consider the almost u n l i m i t e d opportunities available in the hospitals of this immediate area. 70-49 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GHS' Growth Over 30 Years Recalled By Longtime Workers By MIRIAM GOODSPEED Greenville Hospital System's phenomenal growth over the last 30 years has been viewed with wonder by its longtime employes. Many remember when the system was just "Greenville Hospital." "When I came to work here 80 years ago, the hospital consisted just of 'the Corbett •wing, Simms Memorial and a number of solariums," recalled GHS uniform manager, Mrs. Grace Townsend. "There wasn't even a lobby." Mrs. Townsend was executive housekeeper at the hospital for 15 years, until "I decided the time had to come to take a less strenuous position.' Today she and her staff care for clothing for the hospital's doctors, interrs and residents. She also sells uniforms to employes and orders caps for the Greenville h o s p i t al' s School of Nursing. ' "I SEND the hats to our raduates all over the world," ______$&, adding that one Army Nurse Corps in Viet- operators during the busiest nam. A nurse wears her nurs- shift, 9 a.m to 5:30 p.m., and the staff totals 11 ing school's cap wherever she operators," she said. works. "I also worked in the ad"I have built my life around mitting office for* a short time the hospital,' Mrs. Townsend in those early days," she said, "and its highlight to nie recalled, "We had a staff of is the many lovely friends two who worked 12 hours a I have made here over the day." years." The worst tragedy to strike Mrs. Townsend, M r s . Greenville in her memory was Frances Herbert and Broadus the Ideal Laundry explosion Miller were among those in the 1940s. honored with longevity pins "Everything was topsy-turvy, during National Hospital Week people were standing in the ceremonies this week. streets around the hospital Mrs. H e r b e rt, com- trying to find out news, and munications supervisor, has the switchboard stayed lit up also been with Greenville like a Christmas tree," she recalled. General Hospital 30 years. "I've seen our morning mail Broadus Miller, c h i e f grow from a 100-pound bag engineer of the hospital, has to 500 to 700 pounds daily," been there 20 years and he, she said. too, has seen n u m e r o u s "And I have seen the doc- changes. "When I came here we had tors staff grew from 100 to five people in the maintenance 332 currently." department — and I was one SHE BEGAN employment of ithe five. as a switchboard operator at a time when only one operator "TODAY I have a staff of per shift was needed, or a 50, including two assistants total of four,.operators in- and a secretary,'' he said. cluding a relief operator, for Miller is :n charge of. all a six-day i "Today Among those receiving longevity pins and corsages from Greenville Hospital System director Robert E. Toomey (shown left) this week were, left to right, Mrs. Frances Herbert, communications, L Mrsj. Grace Townsend, uniforms, and Mrs._Beulah grounds, security and the fire safety program "We also maintain a prevention program in which we keep a continuous check on equipment so that we can catch problems before they happen," he said "We have one of the best departments in any hospital in the Unitei States with a good w r i t t e n maintenance program," he claimed, adding that the hospital often got requests for information on its maintenance program. "Where a hospital engineer used to be i handyman, now he must be able to handle many technical problems," he said, "so my men and I constantly go back to school to take new courses." All take classes at Greenville Technical E d u c a t i o i Center. In the next 20 years, Miller foresees much more complicated electronic equipment, and his type of job becoming increasingly more difficult. "But you have to be ready to change with the times, and I am very fortunate in having a good crew of men wry pro] • Brown, dietary staff member. Mrs. Herbert and Mrs. Townsend received their 30 year pins, and Mrs. Brown her 25 year pin. (Piedmont photo by Ja G. Wilson) 70-50 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE May 13, GREENVILLE PIEDMONT May 1970 14, NEWS 1970 G. M. Harper Dies At 48 George Mack Harper Jr., 48, of 17 Alpine Way, director of personnel at Greenville General Hospital, died Wednesday. Born at Woodleaf, N. C, he formerly lived at Salisbury, N. C, before moving to Greenville. His parents were the late George Mack and Zelma Watson Harper. He was elected president of the newly organized South Carolina Hospital Society of Personnel Directors last year. He was a member of the local and national chapters of the American Society for Personnel Administrators, a member of the South' Carolina and American Hospital Associations, and was area representative for the American Society f o r Hospital Personnel Directors. He had been director of personnel at Greenville G e n e r a l Hospital for 17 years. A graduate of C a t a w b a College in Salisbury, he held a master's degree in personnel a d m i n i s t r a t i o n from the University of North Carolina. He was a World War II Air Force veteran. He was a member of Buncombe Street United Methodist Church, and the North Greenville Rotary Club. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Louise Eddinger Harper; two daughters, Miss Janice Harper and Miss Sharon Harper of Greenville; and two sisters, Mrs. George Kyles of Cleveland, IN. C, and Miss Lillian Harper of Concord, N. C. Funeral services will be at ; Thomas McAfee Funeral Home Friday at .11 a.m. Following services here, the body will be taken to Summersett Funeral Home, Salisbury. Burial will be in Rowan Memorial Park. The family requests that ; flowers be omitted and any memorials may be made to Greenville General Hospital. The body is at the funeral home, where the family will ! receive friends from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m Thursday. GEORGE M. HARPER JR. G. M. Harper Of GGH Dies George M. Harper Jr., of 17 Alpine Way, director of personnel at Greenville G e n e r a l Hospital, died today at 8:50 a.m. He was elected president of the newly organized South Carolina Hospital Society of Personnel Directors last year. He was also a member of the local and national chapters of the American Society for Personnel Administrators. He had been director of personnel at Greenville General 17 years. A graduate of Catawba College in Salisbury, N. C, Mr. Harper held a master's degree in p e r s o n n e l administration from the University of North Carolina. He was a member of the South Carolina Hospital Association and also of the American Hospital Association. A member of the American Society for Hospital Personnel Directors, he ' served as area representative [in the national organization. 70-51 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE May PIEDMONT 14, 1970 li If * i \ m9 i l ' *ffcg w^4, " f f l ^ * ,j & / fr«$ r^Jfti t' Hr-_•__! . Dedication Culminates Greenville TEC Dream Greenville TEC's $2 million Health Career Center was dedicated Thursday, culminating six years of planning for a training facility to meet critical manpower shortages in health career fields. Ten programs are presently offered in the center (top photo). Platform guests and the audience for the dedication ceremony are shown in the bottom photo. (Piedmont photos by Fletcher ROBS) Nation's First Health Career Center Dedicated By THOM\S W. MOSELEY Wilson said 16 other persons Education Editor are needed today for every A six-year dream w a s physician, and "this type «E realized at G r e e n v i l l e ' s person will be trained in Technical Education Center facilities like the one you have Thursday with dedication of here. During the past 15 years, the facility's Health Career the country's population has Center, "the first program of increased 17 per cent, while physician directed services its type in the nation." Several hundred attended have increased 81 per cent. "This manpower shortage is the colorful ceremonies, braving the hot sun to hear staff related to the time needed members and guests describe to train personnel," he said. "We need to cut down on the $2 million center. Dr. David B. Wilson, direc- the time needed for training waste that tor of the University of and n o t Mississippi Hospital and guest training." Wilson said ithe center was speaker for the dedication ceremonies, called Greenville a new idea, an innovation. "And you at Greenville TEC TEC a leader in its field. "You axe leading the way have a challenge to be a for what needs to be done leader in this field, because throughout the country," he you have the first program said. "This is something of this type in the nation." John W. Manley, dean of greatly needed in the health TEC's Health c a r e e r services field." division, said the building and equipment were impressive, "but the 'thing of beauty will be the quality of program we hope to have here." At present, there are 10 allied health programs being offered. By September, three programs will be added to the curricula. Thomas E. Barton, TEC director, said the program came into existence because of a critical shortage of welltrained peopi'' in allied health areas. He called the facility a product of Greenville. Participating guests during the dedication were Robert T. Ashmore, chairman of the South Carolina Appalachian Development Commission; U. S. Rep. James R. Mann; and i Dr. Robert Toomey, director, Greenville Hospital System. 70-52 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Open house will be held at the center between 2 and $ p.m. Sunday. THE GREENVILLE NEWS DEDICATING CENTER — The Greenville Technical Education Center Health Careers Center was dedicated Thursday in a ceremony on the grounds. Platform guests May 15, 19701 included city, county, regional and state officials. Under construction in the background is a new classroom building. (Greenville News photo by Fletcher W. Ross) $2-Million Health Career Center Dedicated At Greenville TEC City, county, regional and The challenge in this country, CVssf. James R. Mann also etate officials and s e v e r a l he said, is to use our assets spoke briefly. hundred visitors were present wisely especially our trained John W. Manly, dean, Health Careers Center, attributed the at Greenville T e c h n i c a l manpower. Education Center Thursday to Wilson said the shortage of center's existence to community dedicate a $2 million center for personnel in the health fields support, advisory committees, training t e c h n i c i a n s and exists because of the greatly determination of students and assistants in health fields. increased demands for health dedication of staff. The Health Careers Center is services. He suggested ways Be Robert T. Ashmore, chairman, tbe only facility of its kind in sought to greatly extend the S. C. Appalachian Regional tbe nation sepcifically designed hands of the dentist and Planning a n d Development for training of paramedical physician through t r a i n e d Commission, said 40 per cent personnel in dentistry, biology, assistants and that educational of the cost and 100 per cent laboratory technology, mental requirements for m e d i c a l l y of the operating and equipment came from the health technology, p h y s i c a l trained personnel be reviewed f u n d s therapy, radiologic technology, in an effort to cut down on Appalachian Commission. surgical technology and medical time for education required for P l a q u e s a c knowledging records. Additional programs professionals, technicians and support were presented to Dr. assistants and techniques. will be added in September. Thomas A. Collins of Anderson, David B. Wilson, director, The importance of this facility chairman, and Robert A. University Hospital in Jackson, is thab it will make use of Johnson of the Appalachian technician and t h e Regional Planning and Health Miss., and past president of the the Robert A. American Hospital Association, techniques by those who can Commission; 6aid the Health Careers Center perform them where they can Ashmore and Don H i n s o n , Appalachian Planning and is a demonstration of what best be used, he said. needs to be done in the nation Tbe center was designed by Development Commission. in the health care field. J. E. Sirrine Co. and built by The Parker High School Band Wilson, in the dedicatory Yeargin Construction Co. Open directed by James B. Senn, the address, said the center would house will be held Sunday from Chorus of the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing and integrate and correlate health 2-6 p.m. workers in all types o f Thomas E. Barton J r,. the U S. Marine Corps color technology which is essential to director, Greenville TEC, and guard participated in t h e Louis Williams, c h a i r m a n , ceremony. effective team work. The multi-level approach to Greenville Area Commission for patient care Involves health T e c h n i c a l E d u c a t i o n , workers at all levels providing acknowledged support which service, which he said, currently made the center p o s s i b l e . overlap resulting in wasted Robert E. Toomey, director, Greenville Hospital System, and training. 70-53 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS Four of those honored for service at Monday's "Volunteer Recognition Night," at the new Red Cross Chapter House are, from left, Miss Charlotte Hand, who has served 11 years at Greenville General Hospital; Debra Whittington, 15, who gave 500 hours in six months at Roger Huntington Nursing Center; Mrs. Marchant Davis, who has worked as a volunteer for five years at 1970 Allen Bennett Hospital in Greer and Mrs. Mabel Parker who has been an active volunteer for four years in the school health room program. Mrs. Alex Meyers, not shown, is chairman of the office of volunteers, of the Greenville County Red Cross chapter which is a United Fund agency. (Greenville News photo by Cecil Hare) Nancy Thurmond Thanks Volunteers Of Red Cross I By JACK NORRIS News Staff Writer Mrs. Nancy Thurmond, a regular volunteer worker in the Ladies of the Senate Red Cross, thanked Greenville County Red Cross volunteers here Monday night for their services to the community. Greenville County can be particularly proud of 400 trained Red Cross volunteers who gave 29,000 hours of their time last year to help others, she said. Mrs. Thurmond, dressed in her Red Cross uniform and accompanied by her husband, said: "This is the first time Strom has heard me speak. I don't know who is more nervous." She is the wife of Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. Mrs. Thurmond, who is in the Red Cross chapter made up of senators' wives with Mrs. Spiro Agnew as c h a p t e r chairman, said the group meets once a week and is not political. "We have Mrs. Fulbright and Mrs. Goldwater and so you know we don't discuss politics," she said. She said the chapter wraps 90,000 bandages monthly for Vietnam, and for the use of accident and riot victims in Washington, D. C, Maryland, and Virginia. She also does volunteer Red Cross work at Walter Reed Army Hospital where there are 47 wards with 40 to 100 patients to each ward, she said. Many are Vietnam veterans, seh said, and must have a wonderfully courageous outlook although few will ever recover completely. "Recently I wrote a letter 70-54 for a young man who had no arms. I dialed a telephone for a young veteran who had no sight and I fed a patient a complete meal who was paralyzed for life," she said, her voice breaking with emotion. She said Greenville Red Cross volunteers do work which is challenging and rewarding as they serve in hospitals, schools, the Cerebral Palsy Center, and other humanitarian programs. Nearly 150 persons attended the volunteer recognition night at which more than 100 Greenvillians were recognized for volunteer services contributed through Greenville Red Cross projects. Dr. Robert DuBose, pastor of Buncombe Street United Methodist Church, said "it is good to come together with so many persons who "see beyond their own lives and own needs, and are willing and able to help others." Mrs. Morris A. K e n i g presented awards to volunteers with assistance from Mrs. Iliurmond. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE May 15, 1970 NEWS GREENVILLE Ad Club To Hear Hospital Director Dr. Robert E. T o o m e y , director of tbe G r e e n v i l l e Hospital System, will speak at the Greenville Advertising Club meeting Monday at 6:30 p.m. at Holiday Inn No. 2. A native of Boston, Mass., Toomey came to Greenville in 1953 and has since served as director of the h o s p i t system. NEWS M a y 17j 7970 Mental Health Panel Will Review County Resourc years local menta] resources,' particulai __^^^^^ health facilities, were well below area need. Now, Merline said, the' major problem area is becoming "lack of awareness of,what is available and of what can be done to aid ithe many individuals — one in every 10 T- who live marginal lives due emotional problems and This is a Mental Health Month to disorders can be event in a week that will also .relieved." t h a t include the 8:30 p.m. Thursday Marshall I. Pickens Hospital telecast of "Bell of Hope," is a short-term treatment center documentary on the S.C. Mental -that patients to receive Health Association to be carried early enables care ard, in most cases, on ETV channel 29 and a Friday return to the;r families bus -trip to Columbia for a tour] extended hospital stayswithout at a of the S.C. State Hospital. The distance, he ?aid. It is located program parallels one presented on Grove Road near K-Mart earlier 'this year for t h e [J>laza. members of the w o m a n ' s •Plaza. auxiliary to the Greenville County Medical Society. Mrs. Clarence A. Weber, Members of the panel wifl. iMental Health A s s o c i a t i o n be Dr. Earl M c F a d d e n , president and co-chairman with psychiatrist; Mrs. Joan Roper, Merline for t_ie Tuesday panel director of psychiatric nursing program, said it is hopea that at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital; r e p r e s s ntatives of many Thomas Kirby, principal of the ^different clubs and organizations Marshall I. Pickens Children's will be present and that they •Education Center; and th£ p i l Manley, M e n t a l M ggT P a s s information obtained! But" mental health resources'. chaplain, | f ] oh'to their members. discission erated by Mrs. Williaj j^he stressed the need for itmen Jr., outgoing pr< any more volunteers than of the mediea* society auxfl ve thus far stepped forward who has recently been nafi ^join in the countywide effort mental health chairman for the | take mental h e a l t h woman's auxiliary to the S: formation to individual homes Medical Association. aday, May 24. Those who feel David A. Merline, Greenville f_y could assist, either in their County Mental Health Month mediate neighborhood or as chairman and president-elect of area chairman, are asked the SJC. Mental H e a l t h ] to call 232-5382, or to make Association, said that for many] their interest known a t Tuesday's meeting, she said 70-55 The mental health resou: of Greenville County will^ reviewed by a panel .of professionals in that f i e l.d Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at ait open meeting at 'Marshall 1. iPickens Hospital sponsored by the Greenville County Mental Health Association. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS May 17, 1970 Specialists Will Be Recognized During Hospital Week By GRETCHEN ROBINSON News Staff Writer Hospital specialists and technicians battle disease and infection, participate in life-ordeath drama and get involved in traffic jams at shift change in a routine hospital day. During the local observance of National Hospital Week which ends Saturday, some of the specialists will be recognized for their services. There are 1,750 employes in the Greenville Hospital System's six units averaging about two employes for each of the 935 beds around the clock. Six hundred and 60 of t h o s e employes comprise the nursing staff at Greenville General. Two of them are men. But much of the patients' world from the sheets on the bed to the garbage can to the function of a resusitator is contributed by employes the patient never sees. Greenville General is the hub for the county's six units — Allen Bennett Memorial, Roger Huntington Nursing C e n t e r , Hillcrest Hospital, Winiam G. Sirrine Hospital and Marshall I. Pickens Mental Hospital. For its satelites, GGH provides centralized services as an economy measure i n purchasing, e n g i n e e r i n g , administrative, pharmacy and laundry. Purchasing prepares t h e shopping lists for all the units which includes everything from test tubes to bed sheets and the detergents. Just how much laundry can six hospitals pile up? The GGH laundry with 33 employes working around the clock washed 3,430,842 pounds of uniforms and bedding last year. Uniform manager Mrs. Grace Townsend, a 30 year employe, said, "I don't know much about laundry at home," but the hospital laundry is organized with color and every uniform has an owner. Repairs are made free. The 77 housekeeping employes work between visiting rush hours to clean rooms and hallways and a staff of 19 maintains cleanliness d u t i e s through the night. The 31 clinics served by inters providing medical care to the community treated 31,644 clinic visitors last year. Pharmacy service is centralized also and sells to clinic patients only at or below cost. The 18 staffers f i l l prescriptions from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily with a pharmacist on call during the night. "Fourteen years ago, there were five employes in that department," Tom C o l l i e r , director, said, and "most of the drugs being used now were developed in the past 10 to 15 years, too," he said. The hospital print s h o p probably originated with a mimeograph machine but is now in operation fulltime with high speed duplicating and printing equipment. Mrs. Frances Herbert, a 30 year e m p l o y e and a communications staffer, said some 700 pounds of mail comes into the hospital each morning as compared to 100 pounds yeajs ago. Mail being sent out today is 10 times greater than two years ago, she said. She recalled that 30 years ago, there were only three bosses in the entire hospital. She worked 12 hours a day, six days a week. "And if you couldn't find someone to releave you on Sunday, you worked that day too." 70-56 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS May 19, 1970 Hospitafcpirector Cites Responsibility Rv n n ! . . designed /.ncirfnn-. to tn treat tr-o-.ficnl.Anls p a . l i p r . tn By r.AT.F. DALE PF!RRV PERRY V_HU ______•! p l l i ti.^ e units i schools Hv by truinincr training tteachers to News Staff Writer various illnesses. help handle the e m o t i o n a l If the nation's hospitals do Toomey, who said that one behavior of children who cannot not assume a b r o a d e r out of eight persons visits sonjj^corae to the hospiUi ital ic responsibility in meeting the hospital during the course iospn health-care needs of the public, a year, explained that they will fail to justify their economical uses could be kof expense. basic concern for existing, Dr. of hospital systems than director said t h a t Robert E. Toomey, director of the present operations of a I Greenville Hospital System, said percentage of hospitals focusing, Itoonse from parents who have Monday. their attention on the aeifljH H i children treated at the child<Sare unit at Marshall Pickens Speaking at a meeting of the ill. Greenville Advertising Club, "While this is certainly^B hp.s been tremendous, quoting Toomey, who has directed the important part of the hospij^H Mp parent as saying, "You have Greenville system into a na- functions," Toomey said, ' 1 _ \ \ Bpe wonders with my child." tionally-known program, said acutely ill are a small por] tie of the greatest difficulties that dramatic changes will take of patients." a hospital, Toomey said, place in health care since the Briefly explaining the changing behavior patterns Iconcern for public health has system, which is visited d environments, especially for become a "political, economic hospital officials jldren. and public interest." throughout the nation, To< We have had children who Reiterating several times that said that Greenville Genisfc Hye come to us for treatment the main function of a hospital Hospital acts as a centerl " rat bites, and it's frustrating is upgrading the health of the providng health-care needs*, 'treat the problem tem[entire community, Toomey, a small outlying general hos] arily, knowing the child is graduate of Harvard University. designed to care for pat __ ihg to be returned to the envisioned the 95 per cent of with specific illnesses. • same environment," Toomey the nation's hospitals still main- Several of the programs said. ly existing to "treat the acutely Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. "This is where public healthill" becoming h e a l t h - c a r e Toomey said, are coordinated care becomes a problem for centers surrounded by several through tJia use of county the whole community,," he added, emphasizing the importance of providing adequate public health-care facilities, w h i l e training children the need for good personal hygiene. GREENVILLE NEWS M a y 20, 1970 y Drugs Have Almost Eliminated Padded Ce|ls^Psyehiqjfet^Qys average is seven ^nly the largest hospitals" and rently tl By JACK NORRIS granities7 had* psyefoiatriej ingotis, h& said- The average News Staff Writer ItflFbsed to be two years Buildings and facilities get lo.fclW6 services referred with of attention but community5 padded cells are no longer Children avior disorders are much health centers would not be abj& necessary - we can operate fe apt to be boys than girls an open door facility," he said to function without psychi, s. Joan Roper, director of and frequently, drugs which have almost jatric nursing at Marsh overly aggressive, pletely eliminated the pai ickens Hospital, spoke cell in controlling the ment'i behind 'in t__e_a»eja>. ill while they are being treat! necessity for specializi .though of, J f s e r a g i : Dr. Earl McFadden, Greeir draining for the psychiatric; ice. 'R psychiatrist, said here Tue&-jmiEse, and the services to the Rev. Will Manley, direcday. 3 ^ n ? n t and to the community pastoral services at the McFadden was a member ,<_f ;Wiich she can perform Renville Mental Health Cena panel of four who discusseSJifte stressed , that 1 h e aid the word "commupresent trends in mental healthjBfltehiatric nurse must be abl 'should be stressed in discare. to project her personality into ig new trends in mental The program was planned aiKNE work, j therapy. presented by the Greenville plfcomas Kirby, principal of County Mental Health Associa- l%& Children's Re-education tion to make, the public more Center at the hospital, said at aware of increased l o c a l present the center has a capacfacilities and programs i f ity for 10 youngsters age 6-2, in treating mental illness SiJO. a ifesidential program. The stay bringing about community men- from Sunday night until Friday tal health. It was presented,ill hopn. Another 10 are served the meeting room of the IVfl^gm' a daytime progrm. They shall I. Pickens Hospital. 8 a.m. and leave at Psychiatric drugs which reljsr the patient have made it P°&&|RMe said that under the present ble to bring the practice oiferogram the center is atpsychiatry into the commun^liApting to rehabilitate each and back into medicine, he safj.Khiw in the residential program 70-57 noting that until very recently fin a period of six months. Cur- [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREER May 20, 1970 CITIZEN Ten-Year Service Pins Presented At Hospital Awards Presented Employees Durin< Recognition Day A number of employees of Bennett Memorial Hospital Roger Huntington Nursing Ce were honored last Thursday du Employees Recognition Day on grounds between the two in tions. Receiving 10-year service were Ruth Talley and Harr Jroodrr.an. Five-year service pins were a warded to Arlere Watson, RHNC. Daisy Murph, ABMH, Joyce Belcher, RHNC, Myrtle Lindsey, RHNC and Pat Wood, RHNC. A picnic was served employees, doctors and specially invited guests under the trees on the spacious ] lawn between the two health institutions. Presenting the awards were Robert Smith, local administrator ol the two institutions and Burt Moore, chief administrator of Su-! burban Units of General Hospital System. A D M I N I S T R A T O R Robert S m i t h , left, assisted by B u r t Moore, chief a d m i n i s t r a t o r , Suburb r Units, presents ten-year service pins to Har- riette Goodman and Ruth Talley d u r i n g Employees Recognition Day last Thursday at the hospital. (Photo By R. S. Marvin) Hospital Employees Awarded Five-Year Pins E I G H T E M P L O Y E E S of A l l e n Bennett Hosp i t a l and Roger H u n t i n g t o n Nursing Center were presented five-year service pins d u r i n g Employees Recognition Day last Thursday on the hosiptal grounds. A d m i n i s t r a t o r Robert Smith presents pins to six of the eight: D. M u r p h , A . Watson, J . Belcher, P. W o o d , L. W a l d r o p and M. Sm-ith. Abs nt were M y r t l e Lindsey and Elizabeth A u s t i n . (Photo E y R. S. M a r v i n ) 70-58 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT May 23, 1970 May 27, 1970 State Hospital Budget Cuts Jeopardize Accreditation By MIRIAM GOODSPEED Piedmont Staff Writer COLUMBIA - The South Carolina State Hospital is bleeding internally from slashes cut in its budget for the past two years in a row, according to Ted Shelton, director of public relations for the S.C. Department of Mental Health. "We have had to cut back in every area except in services to the patient," he explained. Among items postponed by the budget cuts have been equipment needs which will later incur a heavy replacement cost as present equipment wears out, he said. "We recently completed a long-term care unit — for those patients in need of skilled nursing care but who are not overly psychotic," Shelton said, "but, with the budget cut, we can't afford to hire anybody to run it." South Carolina is the first Southeastern state and only one of three in the nation to be fully accredited. The budget cut which is resulting in a new patient-doctor ratio of more patients per doctor may cause the state to lose its a c c r e d i t a t i o n , said Shelton. "We asked for only a reasonable 12 per cent increase, but the state wasn't able to increase the monies to that extent," he claimed. According to Shelton, the department requested $20,058,913, but the Ways and Means legislation appropriated only $17,773,035. PIEDMONT "Most of this (increase of $1,500,000 over 1969) had already been committed to salary increases scheduled by the state," he said, "After all, the 6 per cent general cost of living rise last year hit us as hard as everyone else." The State Hospital currently has a ratio of approximately 3,000 employes to 5,784 patients. , T h e doctor-patients ratio depends on the building area. In the admittance section, it's-1-35, but in the long term patient wards it's more like 1-200, according to Shelton. The first 30 days of a patient's stay is a crucial one. "If we can give a newly arrived patient i n t e n s i v e treatment for 30 days, and the patient is not too ill, he can return to society quite rapidly," explained the mental health spokesman. "In the long-term patient wards, the prognosis for immediate improvement is not good," he added. Currently State H o s p i t a l facilities include the original 300 acre hospital grounds; The Crafts-Farrow State Hospital, equally large, for people 55 and over; and the William S. Hall Psychiatric Institute, a training center fo r psychiatrists, psychologists,nurses and graduates seeking masters degrees in social work. A Community Mental Health Services division oversees the operation of 14 centers and clinics all over the state. There is also the newly completed but not yet opened long term care 150-bed unit and in the planning stages is a new alcoholic and drug addiction center due to open in two years. The center will be operated with funds accumulated from a recently voted 35 cent additional tax on hard liquor. "This center is increasingly needed, as in 1969 we treated 50 cases of drug addiction and 614 cases of alcoholism and its effects," S h e l t o n said. "Treatment for alcoholics is almost like intensive care, as many who come to us haven't had a normal meal in several months. "When they stop drinking, they suffer w i t h d r a w a l symptoms." He said what was needed was a three-pronged alcoholic treatment program w h i c h would involve rehabilitation, prevention and education. "Even more necessary than this center, however, is the development of a comprehensive statewide program in which the local hospitals would be called upon to do its part in the treatment of the alcoholic," Shelton said. He commended Greenville General Hospital which recently opened an alcoholic treatment center. "The most important items of all are programs and local facilities to ensure early identification and treatment of mental health problems so a patient may avoid that often dreaded 'trip to Columbia. " Dr. M. Nachman, 63, Dies A t Hospital Dr. Mordecai Nasclftftan 63, urologist of 18 E. Hil'crest Drive, died early today at a local hospital after a period of declining health. He was born in Lake City, a son of the late Henry and Annie M. Rephan Nachman. He lived in Lake City prior to coming to Greenville 37 years ago. IDr. Nachman was a member of the Temple of Israel. He was a pre-med student at the College of Charleston from 1922 to 1924 and graduated from the Medical College of S. C. in 1930. His internships were at St. Francis Xavier Hospital in Charleston and G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital. He did post graduate work at Polyclinic Hospital New York City. Dr. Nachman was consultant in urology at Greenville Hospital and St. Francis Hospital. He was director of Southe-.n Bank and Trust Co. Memberships include: diplomate, American Board of Urology; fellow, A m e r i c a n College of Surgeons; American Urological Association, Southeastern Section; past president of the Greenville County Medical Society; S.C. Medical A s s o c i a t i o n ; the American Medical Association; and the Southeastern Surgeon's Congress. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Frances Brown Nachman; three daughters, Mrs. William A. Wentworth of Atlanta, Mrs. Robert B. Jones of Plantation, Fla., and Miss Betty Sue Nachman of the home; one sister, Miss Rachael Nachman of Washington, D.C.; one half sister, Mrs. Sye Wolfe of Charlotte, N.C; and f o u r ' grandchildren. The body is at The Mackey' Mortuary. Memorials may be made to the Heart Associa-; tion. Therapists Are Elected James I. McKee and Mrs. Doris C. Nichols have been reelected as officers of the South Carolina chapter of the American Physical Therapy Association. Both are Greenvillians. McKee, is a partner in the private physical therapy practice of McKee, Vaughn, and Seward, and was re-elected association president; and Mrs. Nichols, assistant chief physical therapist at Greenville General Hospital, was re-elected secre-! tary. Each will serve two years. The officers were elected a t the association's annual business meeting at Myrtle Beach. 70-59 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE NEWS May 26, 1970 THE GREENVILLE THE G R E E N V I L L E NEWS May 3 1 , 1970 NEWS May 28, 1970 o The Editor In Appreciation Of Hospital Services I have read your editorial of May 11, "Emphasizing Hospital Care" and would like to express my gratitude for the excellent care that I received at Greenville General Hospital. My fifty-one days there brought me in contact with many people, and I received the best care anyone could expect to receive. A book could be written about the many dedicated people who served so well. There were those who would ask if there was anything they could get for me and didn't seem to mind doing those little extra things. Just to mention •one, the night supervisor came by my room every night to see if I needed anything. I appreciated too the way my case was discussed. When one questioned a decision that was made, she was told that they were doing what they thought was best for the patient. Yes, I think we are fortunate in the Greenville area to have the hospital services that are available. I have high praise for the Greenville - General Hospital. I think too that we have some of the best doctors that you will find I anywhere. j MARGIE WATSON j Mauldin GGH STUDENTS — Practicing in the special procedures laboratory at Greenville General Hospital, radiologic technology students wind up their two-year program. They are from left, Pam Stamey of Greenville, Lance Dunn of Conway and John Fulmer Of Greenwood. (Greenville News photo by Leon E. Carnes) 14 Complete Training In Radiologic Course Greenville General Hospital School of Radiologic Technology will graduate its last class, 14 students, June 28. Dr. James B. Pressly, director of the school, announced. The radiologic technology program wil be headquartered at Greenville Technical Education Center with classes beginning in July. The practicum will be conducted at Greenville General Hospital. Students completing the two year program are required to take the national examination to become eligible for the Ameri- 70-60 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] can Registry of Radiologic Technologists. Students completing the course and passing the examinations are: Pam Stamey and Diane Woods of Greenville Lynn Altman and Paul Cut! bertson of Newberry; Donn Fricks Bowen of Taylors; Jei DeFanti of Camden; Lan< Dunn of Conway; John Fulm of Greenwood; Sylvia Nalley Rock Hill; Debby Redman of Greer; Deborah Reynolds Sumter; Rebecca Ross of shopville; Phyllis Shealy Salisbury, N. C. Seeking A Career? Inhalation Technicians Scarce By MIRIAM GOODSPEED "With only a handful of trained inhalation t h e r a p y registered technicians in the state, graduates in this field find unlimited possibilities." said Mrs. Barbara Carter, chief inhalation therapist at Greenville General Hospital. Training courses in the field of inhalation therapy are offered at G r e e n v i l l e Technical Education Center. "Those coming out of such training will be registered technicians, rather than therapists," Mrs. C a r t e r emphasized. "Currently there are no more than five or six such technicians in the whole state, and none at G r e e n v i l l e General H o s p i t a l , ' ' she revealed. The chief therapist recently returned from Palm Springs, Calif, where she underwent a two-week training program with the Bird respirator, named after its inventor, Forrest Bird. Mrs. Carter is a registered nurse with a background in therapy. "These new respirators have taken the place of the now obsolete iron lungs," she explained. "Where the old iron lung was big, cumbersome and restricted as to area, the new type units are more effective and much smaller, so they are far more portable." Whereas the iron lung cost, on the average, $20,000 apiece, the modern respirator can be bought at a top price of about $600. "One can buy a good home unit for a little over $300," she noted. Respirators are used for any patient needing aid in establishing adequate ventilation, often postoperatively to avoid respiratory complications in surgical cases. They are also used for all forms of chronic lung d i s e a s e , from emphysema to cystic fibrosis. Other uses include acute respiratory infections a n d controlled respiration when a patient is no longer capable of breathing independently. The machine can administer either oxygen or compressed air. With a staff of 12, Mrs. Carter said that during the high peak of the respiratory season her d e p a r t m e n t administers to as many as 50 patients daily. The high period of r e s p i r a t o r y infections occurs in January, February and March. "All our treatment is given by prescription, and we are at all times under t h e guidance and advice of the Greenville Hospital medical staff, who are specialists in this field," emphasized the nurse. Graduates o f Greenville TEC's inhalation t h e r a p y program can expect to find starting salaries ranging from $6,000 to $8,000 annually. Chief and t e a c h i n g supervisors can earn $10,500 or more annually. To register for the program, one should have a high school diploma or its equivalent, with a strong background in the sciences, math, and English.. An associate of a p p l i e d science degree will b e awarded s t u d e n t s who complete the t w o - y e a r program. Following graduation, the technicians will work under the supervision of a doctor in hospitals, nursing home and other health care institutions. The ideal technician is a young man or woman wh-j enjoys working with people and with complex, space-ag-e equipment, and who has a good head for details and a keen sense of responsibility, according to Greenville TEC authorities. Many More Like Her Needed Miss Vera Smith, inhalation therapist, gives "breathing machine" treatment to a patient. Youths who wish to follow. H i s ; Smith's example may become registered technicians by completing the inhalation therapy couse at Greenville TEC. THE GREENVILLE May 29, 1970 70-61 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] PIEDMONT GREENVILLE June THE GREENVILLE NEWS PIEDMONT June 4, 1970 4, 1970 ~ Greenville $350,000 Is Pledged To Hospital Robert E. Toomey, director, Greenville Hospital System, has been informed that the trustees of the Duke Endowment have pledged to contribute a total of $350,000 over the next five years toward expanding and improving the hospital's medical education program. An appropriation of $90,000 was voted by The Duke Endowment for the first year of a five year period with additional appropriations for medical education scheduled for the remaining four years depending on availability of funds. The Duke contribution of $350,000 will be enhanced by the medical education program costs of $315,000 by the hospital system. Dr. Raymond C. Ramage, director of medical education, said the medical education program will be expanded and improved by employing full time department heads for major medical services, developing a residency in family medicine and enlarging affiliations with medical ..universities. Resident Doctor's Paper Best In State Dr. Raymond C. Ramage, right, director of medical education for the Greenville Hospital System, congratulates Dr. Jon M. Owings, second-year resident in general surgery, on the occasion of Owings' winning firstplace honors in statewide competition for original research papers. The competition was sponsored by the South Carolina chapter, American College of Surgeons. Owings' prizes included a GREENVILLE June 6, gold medal, $100 cash award and the opportunity to have his paper appear in a leading medical publication. The Tennessee native received his medical degree at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, and interned at Floyd Hospital, Rome, Ga. Title of his winning paper was "Definitive Management of Burns Without General Anesthesia." (Piedmont photo by James G. Wilson) PIEDMONT 1970 Respiratory Disease Seminar Scheduled A seminar on ''Nursing in Respiratory Diseases" will be sponsored here June 10 by the Board River TB-RD Association, Piedmont TB-RD Association, TB and Health Association of Area 6, the South Carolina TBRD Association, South Carolina Nurses Association and South Carolina League for Nursing. The seminar, to be held at the Greenville County H e a l t h Department, will feature a display of inhalation therapy equipment, as well as instruction in the use of the equipment in the treatment of respiratory diseases. Faculty members will be Dr. John Scott Miller, Dr. James R. Wilson, both of Greenville; William F. Crisp Jr., director of inhalation t h e r a p y , Self Memorial Hospital, Greenwood; Mrs. Deloris Zeigler, R. N., South Carolina State Board of Health; Mrs. June Campbell, R. N., and Mrs. Ella Garrison, R. N., Greenville General Hospital. Registration may be made by contacting Broad River TB-RD Association, P. O. Box 4156, Spartanburg, or Piedmont TBRD Association, P. O. Box 5149, Greenville. 70-62 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT June 10, 1970 Local Seminar Speaker Predicts Worldwide TB Epidemic By 1990 By MIRIAM GOODSPEED and CHERYL MANNING A possible w o r l d w i d e tuberculosis epidemic within the next 20 years was prophesied today by Dr. John Scott Miller of Anderson at a seminar here on "Nursing in Respiratory Diseases." Approximately 125 medical people attended the seminar sponsored by the Broad River and Piedmont TB-RD Associations and the TB & Health Association of Area Six. All the groups serve 16 counties in the Piedmont region, in cooperation with the S. C. Nurses Association and S. C. League for Nursing. The group also heard Dr. James R. Wilson of Greenville explain that lung cancer is possibly due to a chronic infection. Miller told the group he believes that "in the next 20 years we'll have our sanitariums full and we'll hayean epidemic of TB like we've never seen." He said that strict and enforced laws are an answer to the problem of the spreading of TB. Both North and South Carolina have laws which require persons with tuberculosis to be in a hospital or sanitarium for treatment. Miller said, "All patients with TB should be in a hospital." "Miller's topic was "Tuberculosis Today: A ReEmerging Problem." He talked about the historical background of the disease, diagnostic and treatment methods and the people it affects. _ • He said that the tuberculin skin test is the most effective way of diagnosing tuberculosis. "It ought to be done on everybody," he said. A vaccination against the disease is used in some countries, Miller said. However, doctors in the United States are reluctant to use it because it keeps the skin test from being an effective method of diagnosis, he noted. Age, sex and race are important factors in cases of tuberculosis, he said. The rate for nonwhite persons is higher at all ages than for white persons. After the age of 25 the rate is higher for males of all races than for females. "TB is a disease of poverty," Miller said. There are more cases of the disease reported in N o r t h Carolina than in South Carolina, he said, because North Carolina has more c i t i e s . "In overcrowding, undernutrition is common and rapid transmission is possible." Miller said that according to World H e a l t h Organization figures there were 15 million active cases in the world, excluding China, in 1965. "From my research and studies, I believe cancer of the lung quite possibly results from some sort of c h r o n i c inflammation," Dr. W i l s o n , Greenville t h o r a c i c and cardiovascular surgeon, told the seminar. "We don't yet know the cause of lung carcinoma or cancer, Various respiratory diseases were and, although we don't know discussed in full a t today's seminar on that cigarette smoking causes Nursing in Respiratory Diseases sponit, we do know that it is a major contributing factor," the sored by three area TB-RD associations in cooperation with the S. C. doctor added. "The person who smokes only Nurses Association and South Carolina one pack a day has 20 times League for Nursing. Among the speakmore of a chance to develop ers were, left to right, Dr. James R. lung cancer than the person Wilson of Greenville and Dr. J o h n Scott Miller of Anderson, examining who abstains. "The heavier one smokes, the an X-ray of a chest disease victim. higher his chance of developing Mrs. Ella Garrison, right, an R. N. and a malignant tumor," he said. director of nursing systems at Green"I think, from my own ville General Hospital, was program research, that all cancers are moderator. (Piedmont photo by Bena result of some sort of in- nie J. Granger) fection, and the overall thrust of my surveys indicate a virus infection," Wilson explained. ' He said that the symptoms of lung cancer were a chronic If the cancer hasn't gone too cough; a pain in the chest, far, and if the operation is sue-, shoulder or between t h e cessful, the patient, has three shoulder blades; fever; weight tbnes the chance of living.five loss; shortness of b r e a t h ; $$3rs or more than if h§-% weakness; fatigue; and recur- not operated upon, the surgeon rent pneumonia. said. "The most important factor Other speakers today were in all cancer is the resistance William F. Crisp Jr., who told of the host body, because often of inhalation therapy equipment something in the p a t i e n t ' s and its uses; Mrs. June M. system can fight off the disease' Campbell, R.N., who spoke on or even bring it to a standstill. the pre and post operative nursing care; Mrs. Deloris Zeigler, "There have even been cases R.N., discussing home care; and when this still undiagnosed Mrs. Ella Garrison, R.N., on 'something' in the patient can nursing i m p l i c a t i o n s in cause the cancer to stop and go away, but this is very rare," respiratoryjliseases. he added.. _= 70-63 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT June 10, 1970 All Greenville General, Anderson Memorial Students Successful In ARRT Examination Twenty students from Green- Anderson Memorial Hospital for week. science degree program will The students at Greenville commence at Greenville TEC. ville General Hospital and the difficult examination. Anderson Memorial Hospital With the teaching facilities not General Hospital will receive All of the equipment and completely installed at Green- their registration certificates teaching materials are in the were successful in the recent ville TEC, the instructors com- and hospital diplomas along with final stages of installation and National (ARRT) Registration muted to the hospitals to present their associate of a p p l i e d the facilities will be ready for Examination. the didactical portion of the science degree on June 28, at full operation by July 6. the graduation exercise at Processing of applicants for In November, 1969, the respec- program to the students. May 1, 20 students wrote Greenville General Hospital. the new program is nearing tive hospitals terminated the theOnARRT Registry Examination On July 6 the newly revised completion, and new applicants didactical portion of training and received the results last 27-month associate of applied are still being accepted. and instructors at Greenville TEC were given the responsibility to prepare the students for the National Registry Examination. James Ohnysty, R. T., (AR T H E G R E E N V I L L E NEWS June 1970 RT), at Greenville T E C instituted a d e t a i l e d in. structional agenda and review sessions to prepare the 14 students from G r e e n v i l l e General and the 6 students from 20 Hospital Students To Receive Diplomas Twenty radiologic technology ence degrees in a June 28 gradstudents from Greenville will uation exercise at Greenville receive registration certificates General Hospital. and hospital diplomas along with associate of applied sci- The students completed the National Registration examina_ ! . tion upon completion of courses at Greenville General and Anderson Memorial Hospital. In November 1969, the hospitals terminated the didactic portion of the training and Greenville TEC instructors assumed the instructional agenda. Teaching facilities were not complete at TEC and instructors commuted to the hospitals to present that portion of the progrpm. The revised 27-month associate of applied science degree program will begin at TEC July 6. All equipment and, teaching materials are expected to be installed by that date for operation of the new TEC ! program. Applicants are now 70-64 being accepted. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS A Difficult J June 12, 1970 essqry ef! That difficulty obviously . ___ ... . , The ultimate goal of a' 1 compoundto#beh' .non-medical ^ reading of the proposed plan, & dedicated physicians is to preve fealties, such as social servitfaj* 1 ?* 1 h " ? e . e " described m news as well as cure the bodily disorders that afflict mankind—and that is" >come involved In health care. ^fj^ries, definitely shows the need %113 or 1a comprehensive program. The the aim of what is known as also , contains t h o u gh t comprehensive health c a r ^ . | 'Then too there are all sorts ox* * , issues like the doctor- ptor, or ske riall n g ideas on team levelsdelivery and Although it is elusive, the goal,; knotty v c e s economic bureaucracy and the overwhell patient relationship, governamt *dfcrfnprehensive ! - prepayment, coverage health care for must be pursued diligently. demand for services in rela ote areas. supply of skilled practitl* Great need exists for improvj physician worth his sal J Withdrawal of the p l a n , delivery of health care services e ep»cerriefl,-.,about, an. erefore, should be retarded by people in some areas and so: tthat would teiid.tQ,. interfere 11 concerned as only temporary. economic brackets in the growJI H^very effort must be made to come ing Greenville - Pickens metropol*jj jfcjbe/ freedom *ttip with a new plan which will tan area. This is in no way a rl?. ^ K f ice his pri' ;tjjnieet the health care needs of the flection on the medical profession^ : is but a sketchy outline two counties in a m a n n e r or the existing hospital and othefe" acceptable to a l l health facilities in the two countiros K h e enormous difficulty involvedfcsonably • s e t t i n g up a comprehensivafe roduce rs of health care services. '-___, The fact is that populat^B ihealth services project for aft growth, the medical manpowAL feltropolitan area like G r e e n v i l l f c » n e development ln Greenville shortage, rapid advancement aff •tokens. The difficulties are res2|R. a s t r o n &' Progressive, dedicated health care knowledge arif' > i t e the obvious need for new5"»d skilled corps of doctors and bewildering changes in economic" •fcays to deliver health care, ft"! growth of hospital care and social conditions make J.t preventive care, to ali^cilities are solid evidence that mandatory for all growirFg especially Ifeients of the population. 'tne medical profession and others metropolitan areas to seek new and; •nn . and will make the b e t t e r w a y s of m a k i hjjf [;lt is, therefore, understandable 'comprehensive health services a comprehensive health care services 1 readily available to all residents. * $ p # t the medical profession wishe**^' ^ in this metropolitan area,, ; be involved fully in any plan • Although many people, including-' •feuch a program. This Is the Ration regarding for withdrawal of grant application a proposed quite a few directly involved, do not yet realize or accept it, another' Jpnville-Pickens comprehensive services project under the fact is that health care and what chia program. The doctors is known as welfare rapidly afe oth counties—many of them becoming almost one and twe HB—find certain parts of the same. ^ _ A plan objectionable and Njjteable. Still another fact ls that healtjk care and welfare have come lip Hfe sense it is a shame the be regarded as American rights. | | t l o n for a grant had to be Those rights are being spelled out wn, because it is important in clear legal detail by the courts rove and widen health care of the land. at the earliest possible But it also is wise to delay Obviously these facts pose many iject until it can be modified difficult problems for the people legitimate requirements of and institutions charged with the edical profession. It is delivery task. The problems ar<& tic that no health care especially tough for the medical' t|ram can work without the people, involving matters of vital professional, ethical find practical' pport of the doctors. concern to every doctor. ,y.,The Greenville County Medical For instance It is not easy for §|ltety, which opposed the two many doctors who take ake seriously ictjtqity Plan as impractical, has ha __\h clear its willingness to their obligations to p r a c t i c e erate on a new plan for medicine to embrace a teatrt, ission to the South Carolina concept in which non-medical lachian Health Policy and specialists are involved in the overall care of individuals and groupA jjpflpning Council. A committee to It often is difficult enough f6f ,work with all medical and health medical specialists, to arrive a t ™ | ^ B p s was suggested. specific - line of treatment in a complicated case in which one _~ ^ _ tends tp__ conflict with/, /U-03 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS June 18, 1970 Accidents That Ruin Vacations Can BeNo operation Prevented yet devised can most fun-and-relaxation episodes a group of his "friends" and By JACK NORRIS News Staff Writer from ending in tragedy," a that these accidents do tend replace a section of damaged to happen to those who have spinal column in such a way Each summer many Green- hospital spokesman said. villians start out for a week More people driving, more demonstrated a considerable that the spinal nerve will function below the point of damage. or a day of fun — and the teenagers with an I-don't-care lack of self discipline. outing ends in suffering and attitudes; more drinking and 'But there was this one time No artificial limb is even a tragedy, sometimes for a drug taking are causing the they didn't get away with it," reasonably satisfactory match lifetime. for the capabilities of a living doors of hospital she said. Week-in-week-out, throughout swinging emergency rooms to open more Yet, on the other hand, some one; yet prayer cannot restore the year, small children are frequently than ever before; the who have been extremely depen- a severed one — doctors irnow rushed to Greenville General that, for the present at least of boating accidents inHospital because they found number — the only way to alleviate crease as the affluence of candy-flavored pills w h i l e Americans increases; but docmuch human suffering is to premother wasn't looking; or a tors point to the dramatic reducvent accidents which seriously pop bottle of kerosene behind tion in the ratio of drowning damage the human body. the stove on the floor, or in deaths to total population as Reducing the number of acthe garage on a ledge between proof that training in safety cidents is a goal that is attain-' the wall studs. methods will reduce accidents. able, and will sometimes repay Preventing accidents c a n the individual immeasurably eliminate some of l i f e ' s The physical therapist at the for his efforts, doctors and with tragedies, but being careful is hospital, ' w b r k i n g nurses say. not so much the answer, hospital youngsters and ' others in the personnel believe, as recognizing prime of life, who must go They point out that, unwhere danger lurks and making through half a century of it fortunately, unless such a maimed or crippled because a positive move to sidestep it. tragedy strikes close to home, Generally speaking, nobody somebody decided to take a life many persons refuse to believe in^his hands, can help put the takes a dare except in peerthey might be such a victim. "accident" in perspective. group company but if you dive "Working with a virile young off a bridge and split your head G R E E N V I L L E P I E D M O N T J u n e 17, 1970 on a rock, not your peers, and man scarcely 20, paralyzed from the neck down and going to reprobably not even doctors, will be able to save you, nurses ex- main that way the rest of his life is a very depressing experplain. The family car is becoming ience for the therapist—and is dable and level-headed have a more deadly place statistically infinitely more depressing for dreadful accidents, too, she said, than the home and speed, driv- the victim, who often will live pointing to a young victim who, ing while drinking or with over and over again the moment although he admittedly was exA group d y n a m i c s terested and involved in somebody else who is, and going he realizes was the supreme tremely tired, decided to drive workshop, scheduled for June various aspects of group home from college after his final to sleep at the wheel are things stupidity of his life, she said 24-27 at Marshall I. Pickens work. to be avoided if one cares about Actually, another tragedy is examination. Hospital, will be the first ever A limit of 75 has been set himself, his family, or his that the individual who has such He went to sleep, his car held in the Piedmont region. on the number participating a shattering p h y s i c a l ex- turned over and he ruptured human brothers, they stress. The Greenville Area Mental in the full workshop, but 'ilf you're going to rob a perience, must go through a his spinal cord and is paralyzed Health Center and t h e others may attend a 1 p.m. bank or a store you shouldn't period of depression or the from the waist down, she said. Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, lecture each day. Miss Suzbe surprised if you pay the therapist knows he's not facing Doctors and nurses who are which is a division of the anne Lego, visiting clinical hospital emergency room a visit reality and, therefore, will be assigned to the h o s p i t a l Greenville Hospital System, specialist for the workshop, shortly — you may pass quickly unable to find even such emergency room, work franwill sponsor the workshop, will give the 1 p.m. lectures. on to the undertaker — but rehabilitation as his broken body tically to save life and to patch whose purpose will be "to She is a Ph. D. candidate maimed, bleeding bodies, but reasonable amounts of self- will allow. provide intensive theoretical at New York University. discipline, restraint and knowing She said most such accidents they know there are many and clinical knowledge in the things medicine cannot do. Also on the staff for the what you're doing will prevent happen when the dynamics of groups." workshop are Dr. Roy J. Ellison Jr., medical director The workshop will be open at Marshall I. P i c k e n s to nursing education person- Hospital, and Dr. Ingebord nel, medical p e r s o n n e l , Fleur Kruer, medical director ministers, special educators at the Greenville Area Men-tal and others particularly in- Health Center. Group Dynamics Session Planned 70-66 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS June 19, 1970 Kerosene, MedicineShould BeKeptOutOf Toddlers/ Reach 'When the barefoot season "Everything possible should By JACK NORRIS Children's aspirin today taste ties we always see a great be done to keep potential News Staff Writer las good as candy, which is A house doctor assigned to starts, m the number of kids who hazards out of the way of small No month passes but 30 or fine if the child is sick, but the emergency room, said that h™* av e feet cut by broken bottles children. They should b e more toddlers ages three to is an extra hazard when the ipecac, sold at drug stores sis are rushed to the emergency child is just prowling around without a prescription, is a good wand jagged cans. As the summer supervised in their play and on, most of these things when the family goes on vacaroom of Greenville General for fun things to do, a nurse thing to have around the house k lears d which has small children. s are going to cut themselves tion parents should pay special explained. Hospital. ..., , , , , on seem to get picked up, attention to what new hazards Some have helped themselves "Ideally, I suppose, a 11 . , B are there," the doctor said. to aspirin, others to mother's medicine should be kept under The child who has taken any t h e sai(J He said older children should or daddy's tranquilizers, and lock and key, but I don't know liquid or compound which may B ex t sunb are be reminded frequently that others have drunk kerosene. anybody who has a lock on be damaging - even kerosene p r e v alent among children they have a responsibility to The emergency room staff the medicine chest. So it's - should be induced to vomit n wirfter t h a n s u m ^ e r Hot look after themselves and one reports that most mothers who doubly important to put candy- if possible and a tablespoonfui igrease burns can be especially another if vacations are to be bring children to the hospital flavored medicines somewhere of ipecac, followed by at least after they have taken aspirin the child simply can't reach two cupfuls of tap water, usually painful and dangerous because happy occasions. will cause the child to vomit the grease retains its heat more say they have kept the aspirin them," she said. within 15 or 20 minutes, the and adults should be conscious OB a high shelf in the medicine at all times of where children chest, but the baby climbed up Kerosene is hazardous to kids doctor said. on a chair and got it while under six the year around The child who has swallowed are flaying in the kitchen when they were on the telephone or because most adults don't think poison or any other toxic scalding grease is on the stove, busy in the kitchen or the laun- about it as especially dangerous. substance — and this covers the nurse pointed out. Fathers and mothers will pour medicines taken in excess — Perhaps because of its locadry room. it in a soft drink bottle and should be rushed to the hospital tion away from beaches and leave it in easy reach of as quickly as possible or at nearby mountain resorts, the youngsters, hospital s t a f f least the situation should be Greenville General Hospital sees discussed immediately with the few accidents which directly inmembers say. 'When kids come here having family physician, the house doc- volve family camping. drunk kerosene it's always a tor stressed. 150 to one chance they drank Summer brings on an extra it out of a pop bottle — which large number of bicycle acthey commonly associate with cidents. Last week t h r e e 1. Keep all medicines—especially good tasting medicines treats, of course — yet many youngsters were in the hospital —out of the reach of children. mothers have said to me, 'I after bike accidents, none of don't know why that child drank which involved an automobile, %. Don't leave kerosene, gasoline or cleaning fluids in kerosene. I had it in a bottle the nurse said, soft drink bottles where a small child may find them. behind the stove'." A physical therapist spoke 3. Impress upon your child that medicines are to be used There are child fatalities here about mini-bikes, only when one is really sick and that they should be taken every year caused by eating "These mini-bikes are small then only in the presence of an adult. candy-flavored aspirin, drinking r_~t • _ , _ * _ J 4. Be sure that a pre-school age child knows not to go kerosene, or eating the tran b " 1 k m d °f f a s t a ? d ™tonsts out into the street before you leave him in an unfenced yard quilizers mother keeps in her o f t e n *>nt see them - we unattended. pocketbook see a lot of young kids 8 to 5. Don't let your child ride his bicycle alone until he Scores more are saved, but J* w he ° ' v e b e e n n " r t ° n t h e m has learned that the faster the ride, the more damaging a spend days or weeks in the ™fs things can t be dangerous k l d y o u not h e tnera fall may be. Teach him that bicycle-auto collisions are often hospital * Pist fatal to the bicyclist. Fortunately, the area nurse s a 3 , , . ..,, , supervisor said, adults seem to Many less serious children fi. Don't let a small child push a rotary lawn mower and put solutions like lye and drain accidents particularly prevalent don't let anybody operate one unless he's wearing hard n the ear cleaners out of the reach of l , f ' y summer involve shoes. Many toes and some feet are lost that way. (Second of a series on acci- children, but many still drink f e e t c u t w l t h g l a s s <>r t m c a n s 7. Clean up your yard before the "barefoot" season bedent prevention during the va- bottles of detergent solution, gins. It will prevent many painful and potentially dangerous cation season.) again usually stored in pop botcuts and will reduce the likelihood of snakebite. 8. Whenever you're taking young ^children to a new place, be sure you are familiar with conditions which may be especially hazardous to them and take steps to keep the children safe. Safety Precautions Outlined 70-67 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT J u n e 19, 1970 June 18, NEWS 1970 Workshop To Be Held June 24-27 The newly appointed director of personnel for the Greenville Hospital System is Cmdr. John Robert Reed of Bethesda, Md. Robert E. Toomey, director, announced Thursday that Reed will assume duties Sept. 10. He is currently personnel department chairman at the National Naval Medical Center and will retire from active military duty Aug. 1. ,, GREENVILLE GREENVILLE \Group Dynamics Hospital System Appoints Reed THE THE Miss Suzanne Lego, visiting, al specialist, will deliver, p.m. lectures daily. Otherj will be Dr. Roy J. Ellisonj The Piedmont's first gfi medical director a tj dynamics workshop will be shall I. Pickens Hospital, June 24-27 at Marshall; Dr. Ingebord Fleur Kruer,; Pickens Hospital. d i c a 1 director, Greenville The workshop sponsored Afga Mental Health Center. the hospital, a division of 1 Greenville Hospital System, d' Applicants will be limited to the Greenville Area Mental*® persons in fields of nursing Health Center, is designed fogigtK.at.on, medicine, ministers, provide intensive theoretical ai#|l*fcial educators and others inclinical knowledge in th^ifcSested or involved in various dynamics of groups. aspects of group wont. NEWS June 19. 1970 Reed To Direct Hospital Personnel CMDR. JOHN REED Cmdr. John Robert Reed of Bethesda, Md., has been appointed director of personnel for the Greenville Hospital System, Robert E. Toomey, director, announced Thursday. Reed will assume duties Sept. 10. He is currently personnel department chairman at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda and will retire from active military duty Aug. 1. Reed will hold a position in the corporate structure in the hospital system and will be responsible for directing and coordinating various aspects of employe programs in personnel administration for the s i x divisions. The system employes 1,750 people. As head of the medical center in Maryland, he has been responsible for all personnel functions for 3,300 civilian and military personnel for five years. Previous assignments included the Naval Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., and Naval Medical Unit at Tripler Army Hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii. He also was associated w i t h educational programs at the Naval School of Hospital Administration and was a member of the faculty of the School of Government and Business Administration at George Washington Universi- 70-68 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] ty. Reed also was a member of the Naval Examining Board for procurement of Medical Service Corps officers for the Department of the Navy and designed and administered an educational counseling service for members of the Medical Department for the U. S. Navy. He is a native of Hazard, Ky., and studied at the University of Hawaii and the University of Tennessee and received an M.A. degree from G e o r g e Washington University. THE GREENVILLE June 25, 1970 NEWS Group Dynamics Workshop Begins With Demonstration By JACK NORRIS News Staff Writer The first sessions of a workshop on group dynamics got under way here Wednesday with approximately 5 0 individuals from the fields of medicine, education, s o c i a l welfare service and the ministry attending. The w o r k s h o p , designed to teach those who lead groups how the group leader's behavior affects the behavior of the group, will continue through Saturday. Wednesday morning one completely unstructured group of eight individuals was brought DISCUSS GROUP DYNAMICS — Miss Juanita Woods, at left, clinical specialist at the Greenville Area Mental Health center, joins in a discussion of the interaction of persons within a group with Miss Suzanne Lego, clinical specialist at the North Esses Child Guidance Center at Belleview, N. J. Both are participating in a four-day workshop on group dynamics being conducted at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. (Greenville Newi photo by Leon E. Carnes) together from those attending Finally the developing leader the workshop, and the rfr", becomes a stimulator, who mainder of the a 11 e n d a n t|f Educates, facilities production watched the group function f<jf and communication, balances group forces and shares a 90-minute period. At the end of the period both leadership, and as the group the display group and the" generates ideas and sets limits watchers discussed what had all members are productive and devejop in non-limiting fashion, taken place. Earlier in the morning a workshop members were told. similar number of those who Then the group's productivity are at the mental health center- expands and its range can be for therapy were b r o u g h t ' expected to go beyond leader's together as a group and the capacity to member's maximum potentials. meeting was videotaped. In the afternoon the workshop' Thursday and F tr i d a y's group watched the videotape but sessions will follow the same technical difficulties delayed a general format, Miss Woods discussion of similarities of the said, with a lecture scheduled dynamic g r o u p functioning at '1 p.m. daily which is open process which, supposedly 4*tl "to the public. e workshop is sponsored by least, were common to e.adlf Marshall I. Pickens Hospital group Miss Juanita Wood, clinical and the Greenville Area Mental specialist with the Greenville Health Center. It was planned and is being Mental Health Center, directed by Miss Suzanne Lego, research shows that ce: clinical specialist at the North things happen in all regardless of their s t a t e 1 Essex Child Guidance Center, Belleview, N. J. purpose. One of the basic purposes of the workshop, she stressed, is to show the relationship between leadership of the group and the group's development. When the group is first forming the leader acts as a boss — plans, controls, directs and decides autocratically—and the group submits, conforms, is told what to do, and has little influence on things, with little range of productivity, workshop members were told. Later the leader becomes a guide — plans, controls a n d steers, usually subtly and indirectly — and the group moves from registering differences and initiating c o m p l a i n t s to participation in thinking and forming opinions. Here the group has some active influence but the range is limited to the leader's capacity, w o r k s h o p members were told. 70-69 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Doctors Discuss Clinic Dr. Delilah Turpin, who will head the cystic fibrosis clinic to be established at Greenville General Hospital, discusses plans with Dr. Paul Patter- son, who is associated with the National Cystic Fibrosis Research Foundation. (Piedmont Photo by Ken Shoffner) Plans For Local CF Clinic Waiting For State Approval THE CLINIC will serve a •13-county area. It will receive •support from the Crippled Cfiildren's Division of the State Board of Health and from the local P a l m e t t o , chapter of the National < Fibrosis R*e s t* a _i* c h' m stfifttftosis is medic^lly«daTtion By CHERYL MANNING ' : * _ & _ . * d S? c «* •*? -1* great mimid_er,:..j,Pa& _ Jackson said the? i Plans for a cystic t ^ % t f £ ^ ^ * T _ m said. "It is generally- will be to operate the clinic clinic at Greenville General disease, ways of educating-thediagnosed until the Child /|>nce a month as a service Hospital are awaiting approval public about it and recent M the Greenville Hospital had it several ye; from the Crippled Children's research advances w e r e disease resembles otner .System. "We have a comhospital that's trying division of the State Board q discussed. itfory disease*- stfch a s n' unity ia 4>rQMfeItisR£ r e n d e r com mumty services of Health, according to Dr, Harold P. Jackson of thei" DR. DELILAH T u r p i ^ f % hey've been most helpful." i»arly emphysemas in . clinic will be a matter Christie Pediatric Group. former head of the CF clinic en.' ^'bringing together a l the "We hope to begin the clinic at ' Emory University, will') ciii clinic proposed ftr who can help these in the next few weeks," direct the clinic here. She. is * reenville will p r o v i «f|j jjple gdren," Jackson said, associated with Dr. Bill Jackson said. He and foufc? primarily a diagnostic service, lere is no cure for cystic other local doctors met MonJ . Jackson said. The salt >sis. Patterson said the onday with Dr. Paul Patterson, Patterson said CF is th$ Which is the best way to di jope of a cure is to. learn most serious genetic disorde^ professor of pediatrics at th# CF, will be given at the clii Modify genes. childhood and the most Albany (New York) Medican who have CF ha m is impprtant that the us lung disease - u Children College and c h a i r m a n extremely salty sweat. Alsqj en. There are 40 known: offered at the clinic will, he- public be educated about CF, emeritus of the G e n e r a l hj» said. "We have found that s i n the G r e e n v i l l e Medical and Scientific Councjl' d^# t a r y , l a b o r a t o r e in 50 per cent of newly ^jjltens county area, and doc-t of the National Cystic Fibrosis medical §|iagnosed cases if not treated, tors' say that for each diagnos**- services Pelotherapy Research Foundation. to children already 50 per cent are dead by 4 'ed case, there are three .: undei treatment. .. or 5 years." ; diagnosed. 70-70 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE G R E E N V I L L E PIEDMONT June 26, 1970 Specialist S a p People Un jer I^<ppy More ConifonaDie If Participating In A Group By CHERYL MANNING A workshop on g r o u p dynamics which will continue through Saturday at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital here is intended "for people who are; working with groups to learn more about the g r o u pi process." Miss Juanita Woods, clinical specialist in psychiatric nursing with the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, said this is the first endeavor of this size that the Marshall Pickens Hospital and the Greenville Area Mental Health Center have sponsored iointly. Miss Woods and Miss Suzanne Lego, visiting clinical specialist at the workshop, agreed that the workshop has had an "enthusiastic reaction from the approximately 50 guidance ' counselors, ministers, nursing educators. psychiatrists, social workers psychologists and correction;! institute officials who are af tending, "Group dynamics is one of the p r e s e n t bandwag< Miss .Lego saad. "The.ius* of groups has reached the inl of many people -w country.'f she c6irrmerai(l. ''People tend to be able to look at themselves more comfortably in a group than alone or with one..other person," Miss Lego sak man\*' '•^themselves., irom ' the oth people in th'e group." She stressed that the ideal group leader is one who, stimulates and does not boss or guide the group, leader who acts pr^uclive' than who «timulata<= There is also a tendency ! among the members of groups to compete for attention from the leader, she noted. A clinical specialist at the North Essex Child Guidance Center, Belleview, N. J., Miss Lego said she has done similar workshops in other areas. She has noticed no difference in the participants in Greenville and in other places. "People tend to be the s a m e everywhere," she observed. The workshop's final session will be Saturday. ' ' A n y iprofessionals who are interested in working with groups may come to the 1 p. m. lecture," Miss Woods what' the group cai itself. The leader, in turn, is stimulated by what's going .— _________ certain phenomena common to all" groups, whether it "be a group of prisoners or a classroom situation. "In early they tend to look to With Group Dynamics Workshop Working with the group dynamics workshop at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital are, left to right, Miss J u a n i t a Woods; Miss Suzanne Lego, Dr. Rov J. Ellison. medica_Ldir____J_Q___at_ the hospital and Dr. Ingebord Fleur Kruer, medical director at the Greenville Area Mental Health Center. (Piedmont photo by B e n n i e J. Granger) ' 70-71 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS t oiifcl Affect 19 S.C. Medical Projects June 26, 1970 Coney believes it was thei back in line with what he had la great extent on Hill-Burton," By DOUGLAS MAULDIN News Columbia Bureau President's intention not to can- requested." he said, "We're not wealthy COLUMBIA — Possible cut- eel out Hill-Burton "but to get I "South Carolina depends to I l i k e a M o f o t h e r s t a t e s w h i c h backs in federal funds for can fund their own projects medical facilities would affect without federal help." __ 19 projects in South Carolina including two major hospials in Greenville, an official of the State Health Department said Thursday. G R E E N V I L L E NEWS The official said the projects J u n e 2 6 , 1970 threatened include St. Francis Hospital and Greenville General Hospital. No exact figures were available on what funds would GREENVILLE PIEDMONT be lost in any cutback pending congressional action, but the J u l y 2, 1970 state official said "several millions" would be involved in both Greenville projects. Plans for a cystic fibrosis The House voted Thursday to diagnostic clinic to be operated override President Nixon's veto at Greenville General Hospital of the $- "5 billion grant and for a 13-county area are loan authorization bill f o r awaiting approval from the continued hospital construction. Crippled Children's division of The bill still faces Senate action, Newly appointed p r o g r a m liaison with the Greenville Area the State Board of Health, Dr. but final enactment is expected coordinator for the Marshall I. Mental Health Center and servHarold P. Jackson of the next week. Pickens Hospital is Mrs. Joan ing as nurse for the Children's Christie Pediatric Group, said Roper, former director of nurs- Re-Education Center. Thursday. Richard Coney, director of the ing service. Acting as director of nursing Dr. Delilah Turpin, former Division of Health facilities of Frank D. Pinckney, hospital services pntil a new one is nam head of the CF clinic at Emory the State Health Department, 1 administrator, said a tremen- ed will be Mrs. Barbara Newby, said S.C. projects bound to sufUniversity, will direct t h e dous amount of planning and head nurse. fer for certain from any cutclinic. work is necessary to provide Mrs. Roper assumed her new backs are the two in Greenville The proposed clinic w i l l new and expanded services at duties June 12. She is a native plus hospitals planned i n [provide primarily a diagnostic the hospital. of Greenville and a graduate Edgefield and Dillon. t service Jackson s a i d , adMrs. Roper's new duties will of Greenville General Hospital ministering tests and assisting "About 19 projects in all would include coordinating the day School of Nursing. She has been in dietary, laboratory be affected," Coney said, cutting treatment program; p a t i e n t on the faculty of the School across the whole medical spec- physiotherapy and m e d i c a l program scheduling of treat- of Nursing here and was area trum. Besides hospitals, these services for children already ment modalities; s p e c i a l supervisor for the psychiatric would include health centers, being treated. services including volunteers, floor at Greenville General nursing homes and diagnostic Support for the clinic will tours, meeetings; day treatment Hospital. treatment and rehabilitation come from the C r i p p l e d facilities. Children's division of the State Under its 1970 Hill Burton Board of Health and from the allotment, South C a r o l i n a local Palmetto chapter of the received $3.4 million as com- National Cystic F i b r o s i s pared to $5.4 million in 1996. Research Foundation. The clinic He suggested the President, will be operated once a month. in vetoing the medical facilities Jackson said cystic fibrosis, bill earlier this week, may be a respiratory disease which efangling to get Congress to fects children, is fatal in 50 return to 1970 funding levels. per cent of the newly diagnosed Those Congress approved almost cases where there has been no unanimously were more near treatment. He said, that there the 1969 levels, Coney noted. are 40 known cases in the In any return to 1970 levels, Greenville-Pickens county areas Coney said, "We're talking but for every diagnosed case, about three fifths of the money. there are three undiagnosed. We could do only thre fifths of what we could normally do." If cutbacks are in store, he said, the federal funds in mos* cases would not go far dowr the priority list of projects and some may have to be eliminated this year. The official noted, however that state officials could apply percentages of available money to priority projects. 70-72 Proposed Clinic Awaits Okay Hospital Coordinator Mrs. Roper Named [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE NEWS PHYSICIANS BEGIN INTERNSHIP Seven new young physicians began their year of internship Monday under the medical education program of Greenville General Hospital. Left to right, first row, are Dr. James L. Smith, Medical College of Georgia; Dr. John W. Davis Jr., Bowman Gray School of Medicine, and Dr. John W. Greene, Medi- THE GREENVILLE July 3, July 2, 1970 cal College of Georgia. Second row, Dr. W. Kenneth Easley Jr., Louisiana State University; Dr. Joseph L. Jackson, Medical College of Georgia, and Dr. Roger E. Nunn, Medical College of Georgia. Not present for the photograph was Dr. Joseph T. Turnbull, University of Pittsburg School of Medicine. NEWS 1970 70-73 Mrs. Joan Roper Has Hospital Post Mrs. Joan Roper, former director of nursing service, has been appointed p r o g r a m coordinator for the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, Frank D. Pinckney, h o s p i t a l administrator, announced. Mrs. Roper, a Greenville native, was graduated from the Greenville General H o s p i t a l School of Nursing and has been a member of the faculty. She also was area supervisor for the psychiatric floor at Greenville General Hospital. Mrs. Barbara Newby, head nurse, will be director of nursing until a new one is named, Pinckney said. [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] tmlm Volunteers i ^ ecewe ea ^ "hospital volunteers have con_ _ tinued their education and interest in the health field to have been presented red and become professional nurses white striped caps as candy and medical and radiologic stripers. technologists. Mrs. Jack H a r r i s , administrator of n u r s i n g services who made the presentation of the school of nursing, told the audience of candy stripers, tbeir p a r e n t s , hospital officials and representatives of the auxiliary, which is sponsor of the teen-age auxiliary, that "Volunteer service is a two-way street." The capping c e r e m o n y sympbolizes that the high school students have met the r e q u i r e m e n t s for full membership in the teen-age auxiliary. To qualify as candy stripers the members attend orientation and nursing instruction I classes and serve an apprenticeship under the "big "You probably know what sister" concept with an active these young volunteers do in member of the teen-age auxserving the community and iliary. the hospital," Mrs. Harris Candy stripers must serve said, ''and their contributions eight hours per month to are noteworthy. They work maintain., as active in many departments and members., status are serving perform many services, by in various They departments and which our patients benefit." areas, including the admitting office, escorting patients to "As parents of c a n d y hospital rooms in njirsinj stripers you should also apdistribqljpg mail; preciate that volunteer service ngeasnoh-nursing needs %_ tl 5 is helpful to these young girls nursirtg'.areas hospital; in thieir own development," Xray and pofh the a r macy? Mrs. Harris continued. "Their departments, as well • as experiences will be helpful to assignments on the hospitality them. They will learn to work cart, gift shop and television together in group work. They will learn to hold confidences. rental service. They will give dedicated Each year, with income service in helping others, from bake sales and other thereby making a positive con- fund-raising activities, candy tribution to the good of the stripers donate equipment to community. They will grow the hospital or p r o v i d e ! in knowledge and in poise. funds. All of these, in great measure, contribute toward good Attending the ceremonies citizenship." were Mrs. Richard V. Slaker, vice president of the adult L. Stanton - T u t t l e , ad- auxiliary, and Mrs. T. W. ministrator of internal opera- Williams, adult chairman for tions at the hospital, con- the teen-age auxiliary. gratulated the group. He emphasized the important role Candy striper officers are which volunteers serve in Miss D e n i s e Petropoulos, hospital service. Tuttle pointed president; Miss Debbie Dill, out that a number of candy vice president; Miss Ann stripers who have b e e n Montgomery, secretary, and Miss Carol T h o m p s o n , treasurer. c apd By home towns, the new candy stripers are: E a s l e y , Theresa Crooks and Donna Watson; T a y l o r s , Jill Halstead; Honea Path, Susan McCullough and Jane Southern; Piedmont, Debbie Casey, Becky S e y m o r e , Karen Smith, Ramona Williams and Cynthia Wilson; Travelers Rest, Joyce Stepp. Also, Greenville, Frankie Baldwin, Diane Boyd, Diane Chapman, Kelle Cox, Sandra Duncan, Debbie Eskew, Terry Fennell, Sandy Forest, Susan Hazelwood, Judy H e s t e r , Cheryl Jamison, Pat Johnson, Edith King, Brenda Law, Dale Long, Jill McLane, Debbie Mullinax, Merri P a i n t e r , Diane Sammons, True Scott, Debra Sosebee, D e b o r a h , Spearman, Mary Stall, Kathy Standridge, Teresa Stepp and Gloria Thompson. y tm 0 ___•.' SKf liHi: CANDY STRIPERS—Among 37 new candy stripers at Greenville General Hospital are these at the ceremony in which Mrs. Jack Harris, administrator'of nursing services, presented caps. From left are Mrs. Harris, Miss Becky Seymore of Piedmont, Miss Teresa Crooks of Easley and Miss Terry Fennell. This brings the teen-age auxiliary membership at the hospital to 236. (Greenville News photo by LeoE E . Carnes) THE GREENVILLE July 3, 1970 70-74 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] NEWS THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT July 6, 1970 Hospital System $12 Million Bonds By April By JOAN MCKINNEY Governmental Affairs Editor By April 1971, the Greenville Hospital System (GHS) plans to sell an additional $12 million in general obligation bonds to construct its new Grove Road facilities. The sales — to be made in issuances of $6 million each — would require a 12-mill tax levy to service the bonds. The 1969 levy for the hospital district was 4.5 mills. Hospital officials will appear Tuesday b e f o r e Greenville County Council to s e e k authorization for the first sale, proposed for August. Councilman (Robert Vaughn said today a letter from hospital officials says the sale is needed to pay the contractor in September. The letter further states the sale would carry construction costs through March, 1971, Vaughn 12-mill figure for anticipated jected finance needs which were revenue needs is included in to come from local sources. the letter, Jones said. Vaughn said he conferred Councilmen Vaughn a n d with hospital officials on the William Kay Jr. today studied apparent speedup and was the pending request and noted given four reasons for the that the first sale, which coun- changes: cil will consider Tuesday, First, a lack of federal would put the hospital system funds. The system h a d some $7 millipn ahead of pro- originally expected $5 million jected bond sales. in Hill-Burton funds to assist The system has already sold in the project, only a portion $3.5 million in bonds for the of which were received. new facilities. Secondly, a sudden change Vaughn said a t a b l e in the bonding market which publicized at the time of the has increased the interest rate referendum in which the from 4.5 to about 6.5 per building program was ap- cent. proved included the following Third, opinion of bonding estimates: authorities that bonds should In 1970, $2.4 million in funds be retired in 15 years instead needed, with an added 1.1 of in 20 years as originally mills taxation; in 1971, $3.6 planned. million needed, with a millage Fourth, a decision to build increase of 1.7 for a total 300 instead of 200 beds at increase of 2.8 mills; by 1974, millage to increase to a total of 11.2 mills on a total building expenditure of approximately $248 million. COUNTY Treasurer Willie Jones said today that he has THE TABLE — compared a copy of correspondence from hospital officials on the up- with tne pending requests — coming August sale and on means the district in early a second $6 million sale 1971 would be more than $9 milproposed for April, 1971. The lion ahead of its originally pro- the general and surgical hospital part of the project. Hospital officials believe it will be less expensive to provide the beds now than to make additions l a t e r , Vaughn explained. BOTH VAUGHN and Kay noted what they said has become a council dilemma: The body must give technical approval to the bond sale — thus creating the appearance of raising taxes — when, in effect, the sale has already been approved, in referendum. Vaughn pointed out that 1969 General Assembly a c t i o n provided that bonds sold for the hospital building program would not be charged against the county's bonding ability. The same act allows the 70-75 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] hospital system to sell bonds up to 25 per cent of the county's assessed valuation, he said. The councilman said that, based on a current assessment of $127 million, the system could sell more than $31 million in bonds. Discussing the h o s p i t a l system's Tuesday appearance at council, Robert Toomey, system director said the request for bond issuance is "in accordance wilh t h e referendum passed by voters in 1968." "A contract for construction was signed last fall," Toomey said. "As the p r o g r a m progresses, funds must be available to meet the payments to t h e contractor." Toomey restated most of the reasons offered by Vaughn for the speedup in bond sales. "Economic conditions have changed," Toomey noted, adding 'that "interest rates are approximately three per cent greater than those which prevailed two years ago and amortization of bonds over a 15-year period are m o r e saleable than the 20 to 25 year bonds on which we had predicated our projections." Acceleration of the construction program will "more adequately meet the pressing needs which now exist," the director said. "However, in the long run, allowing for inflation, the total millage for the entire project is no greater than originallj planned and projected," he said. THE GREENVILLE NEWS July 7, 1970 For Hospital Expansion County Council To Hear Request For $8.5-Million Bonds Issuance County Council will hear a projected finance needs which surgical hospital. Vaughn said request Tuesday by Greenville were to come from local hospital officials believe it will be less expensive to provide Hospital System officials to sources. authorize sale of $8.5 million Vaughan said after conferring the beds now than to make in general obligation bonds with hospital officials that the additions later. which will require a 7.5 mill apparent speedup could be at- Robert E. Toomey, system tributed to e c o n o m i c con- director, said the total millage tax levy. for the entire project is no The request for a second ditions. greater than was originally The system had originally anissuance of bonds is in ac- ticipated $4 million in Hill- planned and projected. cordance with the referendum Burton funds and received $1.3 He cited inclusion of the Roger passed by voters in 1968 to million though an additional C. Peace I n s t i t u t e for allow for the expansion of million may be expected during Rehabilitative Medicine which hospital facilities in Greenville the projects next 18 months, was not included in the current County. construction planning in 1968. he said. The 1969 levy for the hospital The bonding market has in- "The Appalachia p r o g r a m , district was 4.5 mills which creased the interest rate from however, p l e d g e d $1,800,000 provided for the sale of $3.5 4.5 to about 7 per cent, Vaughn toward construction of the million in bonds for the new said and bonding authorities' Roger C. Peace Institute, and Grove Road facilities. opinion that bonds should "be this grant enabled the hospital Councilman Robert Vaughn retired in 15 years instead of system to accelerate the consaid the request would put GHS in 20 years as originally plan struction of this facility and make it available sooner than well ahead of projected bond ned. sales and the district in early A fourth reason included the expected," Toomey said. 1971 would be more than $9 decision to build a 300 instead The 7.5 mill request is a part million ahead of its originally of 200 beds at the general and of the total program presented in 1968 which will require an increase of 12.8 mills on a total building expenditure of approximately $28 million through 1974. The estimate two years ago was 11.2 mills for $24.8 million expenditure by 1974. An ordinance for amendments to the zoning map will be up for first reading at the meeting. Also scheduled for discussion is the ordinance allowing sale of industrial bonds' for construction of an A m e r i c a n H a r d w a r e Supply Co. 70-76 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Good Afternoon This Is Gil Rowland DR. H.C.H. SOYSA of Colombo, Ceylon, who visited in Greenville this week, is a tea planter. He showed movies and slides about production of leaves for the beverage we drink so regularly and know so little about. Constant spraying to fight fungus and other dangers and regular picking of buds and tender leaves are keys to successful tea growing. The 270 by 140-mile island south of India produces 500 million pounds of tea annually. Dr. and Mrs. Soysa told a small gathering here about the interesting island, which has a population of 13 million. Although elephants are declining in number because more of their jungle territory is being cultivated, Ceylon still has elephant round-ups. A kraal, or pen, is built in a remote area and hundreds of. persons whoop ROWLAND and holler to drive the herd, towards the gorge that leads into the kraal.' Dr. Soysa participated in the round-up of 42 elephants. He said a good mahout can train a wild elephant in three months. Dr. Soysa, a retired medical doctor, said Ceylon has virtually eliminated the scourge of malaria in the past decade or two. The island was settled about 500 B.C. by the Sinhalese who came down from the valley of the Ganges. The Portuguese occupied part of it in 1505, and the Dutch occupied part in 1658. Britain annexed the island in 1796, and it became a crown colony in 1802. A British-type constitution was adopted in 1946, and the island became a member of the Commonwealth in 1948. The Soysas were guests of the Robert W. Joergers, 205 W. Prentiss Ave., as part of a bus tour of the United States. Family From Ceylon Visits Here Dr. D. E. Wallar, left, chief of the Emergency Room Physicians' Service at Greenville General Hospital shows equipment to Dr. and Mrs. H.C.H. Sojtea of Colombo, Ceylon. (Piedmont photo by James G. Wilson) "Mountain people are less outgoing — or, as they would put it, more reserved. They sit on front porches of lofty mountain cottages overhanging the abyss, and fold their hands and gaze mystically at the little clouds proceeding across the heavens and thank God they are here instead of down below. They represent the contemplative, not the active; they had rather philosophize than persuade. They are poor golfers, better tennis players and excellent chess players. Professionally, they teach, preach or philosophize. "The beach or mountain itself is not essential: it does not determine the temperament, it is but the outward manifestation. Many plainsmen, for example, are beach people at heart. They're outgoing, they're energetic, they'd rather close a deal or be elected than read a book. "The division between beach and mountain people, after all, is only spiritual. Everyone throughout history has been one or the other. Pericles, Alexander the Great, Caesar, Charlemagne, William the Conquerer, El Cid, Charles the Bald, Dale Carnegie and Lyndon are undoubtedly beach THE WINSTON-SALEM Journal said it: people; Plato, Sophocles, Hamlet, John Milton, Dostoevsky, "There are two kinds of people in America, and the Leon division is riot between North and South, rural and urban, people."Blum and Eugene McCarthy, clearly mountain black and white. The real division is between people who like to vacation in the mountains and those who like to go to the beach. All Americans, at heart, are either GREENVILLE PIEDMONT beach people or mountain people. "One must generalize, of course, but beach people J u l y 9, 1970 are more open, more outgoing, and at first sight, more friendly. They like the heat, the excitement, the informality of the beach. They like people and, professionally, they usually deal with people. Their ranks include most lawyers, salesmen, merchants, realtors, druggists, restaurateurs and 7 0 - 7 7 undertakers. . . I [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE GREENVILLE By JIM TURNER Governmental Affairs Staff Taxes for 1970 increased 12 mills throughout most of Greenville Cjmnty, with increases high as 42.5 mills in districts. The figures are from the 1970 tax millage schedule released today by County A u d < Elizabeth Riddle. H o s p i t a l , library, school and recreation ages account for the general :rease. Last year's G r e e n v i l l e ^ Hospital System levy was 4.5 i mills. The levy is 12 mills for 11970. The 7.5-mill increase is due to the hospital systems' planned sale of $12 million in bonds to pay for building the new Grove Road facilities. The1 'new facilities were approved by referendum in 1968. The county library tax is 6. mills, up two from 1&9. The, 2-mill increase in the library levy is to cover costs of expansion and operation of the new College Street facilities. PIEDMONT July 15, 1970 [gst Of Greenville Co Fay 12 Additional The county recreation levy is up from 1.5 to 2.5 mills. The commission's budget required the millage hike to hire needed \ personnel and carry out existing • recreation projects. Special school levies increased! 98 to 99.5 mills to pay a general obligation bono* issue of $5.15 million, approved by county referendum in 1968, and to fund the school system's building and r e n o v a t i o n ; program. The 1970 county g e n e r a l operating millage remains at 14.25 mills. General bounty[bonds at 4.5 mills, board of ^education at .75 mill, reforestaat' .25 mill, charitable; [hospitalization at 6 mills ^ M the County Art Museum aP??S ' mill also reflect no change from; the 1969 figures. ' I ; In 1969, the S. C. General Assembly enlarged the Greenville Memorial A u d i t o r i u m district from the old Greater Greenville Sanitation district to include all {li§tri<;ts under the Greenville 'County S e w e r Authority, except those in .Laurens and Anderson counties. As a result, 69 new districts! have been added to the 1 auditorium levy, paying .5-mill| each for maintenance of the facility. The maintenance levy for the 19 original districts decreased to ,5-mill. Since the bond retirement levy also decreased by j .5-mill, the levy for those) districts fell from 4 to 3 mills. The county's highest millagej increase was 42.5 mills for both) Mission and Merrifield districts,] h have new roads going' 1 Merrifield is getting increased water and sewer service, and Mission has a new fire department. Lowest increase was 9.5 mills for Greenville City (500 and 519), Greenville Area 3 (599), and Parker (302). Using the millage chart, taxpayers can compute the increase in their property taxes, with 1 mill equalling $1 per $100 ^assessed property value. The ijjfssessed value of real estate, ior tax purposes, is 5 per cent of its true value. The county has four more districts than in 1969. Five new districts were created, and Greenville City, district 518 was; merged with 519. The new districts are Taylors Fire (278), Piedmont Park Fire: (279), Greer-Taylors Fire (288), and two new Parker districts (311 and 312). J Greenville Taxpayer's Liability Upped By 12 Mills Most Greenville C o u n t y tax bills in Mission and Merproperty owners will face a 1970 rifield districts. tax increase of at least 12 mills, The 12-mill increase going into according to figures released effect in most districts reflects Wednesday by Elizabeth Riddle, increased levies for the Greencounty auditor. ville Hospital System, t h e Increases range from 9.5 mills recreation commission, library in several districts, including and school system. the City of Greenville, to 42.5 The general county millage mills, which will be added to levies were not increased. The THE GREENVILLE July 16, 1970 NEWS millage remains at 4.5 for reduced .5 mill. general county bonds, 14.25 for An increase of 7.5 mills in the county budget, .75 for the the levy for the hospital system county Board of Education, .25 is due to planned sale of $12 for reforestation, six for charity million in bonds for new hospitalization and .75 for the facilities on Grove Road. The art museum. total hospital system levy is Enlargement of the Green- 12 mills. ville Memorial A u d i t o r i u m The levy for the Greenville district to include all districts County Library incresed from under the Greenville County four to six mills to pay for Sewer Authority added 6 9 expansion and operation of the districts. A .5-mill tax will be new College Street facilities. levied in the new districts for Special school levies increased auditorium maintenance, while from 98 to 99.5 mills to pay in the 19 original districts the for a general obligation bond levy for operational purposes issue of $5.3 million approved is to be reduced .5 mill and in a 1968 referendum. the levy for debt- retirement The largest increases, 42.5 70-78 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] mills in districts 200 and 201, will affect property owners in Merrifield, where increased water and sewer service is to be provided, and Mission, where there is a new fire department. New roads also are being constructed in the two areas. The highest tax rate, 229 mills, will be levied in Paris Mountain district 274. The lowest millage levy applies in C o l u m b i a districts 25 and 26, at the southern tip of the county, where the 1970 total taxes are 132.5 and 142.5 mills. The assessed value of the real estate, for tax purposes, is five per cent of its true value. . Nursing Profession, Like Others, Is Now Specialized B> MARIE M l-l DI \ Piedmont Women's Editor Almost all little Rir.s play the game of nursing sick dolls. Many grown-up girls actually become nurses to help restore health :o the 111. However, with the rapid growth In, the field of health and patient care, a nurse today not only knows how to handle emergencies of every kind, but often socialises In .a field in which she may be personally lntere>'i'dU •. „ This is evidenced by ".:.<• growing number of special unit centers at the GrcennUf Gfnml Hospital — spinal cord coronary car*, intensive care n n — where patient* with i concentrated care. Nurses in these units beconj with tbe particular problems inroU Nurses in tbe spinal cord u n f t ^ B ^ K e l v e d medical supervision and directions physicians, physical therapists and other members of the hospital team. The first Intensive care unit, six beds established In 1984, nas been Increased to the present ll-bed unit. Nursing seminars are held twice monthly for nursing personnel assigned to this unit. One of the most fascinating special areas is the coronary unit, where nursing personnel read cardiac monitors (TV-type screen) and have learned to recognize symptoms ot pending difficulties. They also have bad special training with heart specialists and nursing-ln-servicc Instructors and many have attended workshops In this sepclalty area. The Intensive care nursery tor Infants is a real comfort to parents of very 111 babies. The premature ones can be constantly observed and any difficulties noted immediately. New, special equipment, such as the navel feeding method, has proved Tery beneficial in the care of infants. Nurses here have received special teaching and Instructions and all have attended workshops dealing with the care of critically 111 babies Anyone who has undergone surgery In recent years has been in lb** recovery room. Here, a patient Is carried Immediately following surgery and remains until his condition ls considered stable. With a staff of trained nurses here, the floor nurses are relieved of tbe constant supervision a palient needs following surgery, freeing them for the routine care of other patients. The personnel has developed special skill., ln the use of emergency equipment and In recognizing the symptoms of patients who need Immediate attention. While the nurses, stationed on a regular basis ln the special units are highly trained for that particular area, nursing personnel assigned to other areas Of the hospital are just as qualified and well prepared to meet any situation which may develop In serving their patients. There ls a great need for more nurses ln the Greenville Hospital System and ln most other hospitals. More and more people are receiving professional hospital care and this requires more trained personnel to staff the hospitals. Nursing has gained full status as a profession, and skills must be acquired and developed tbrougb education and clinical experience. There are three types of nursing education programs for the registered nurse! three-year hospital diploma programs as represented at General Hospilal School of Nursing. two?jfeax associate degree and four-year baccalaureate- degree program at the university level. There a n three of the latter in the state. Clemson University. University of South Carolina and Medical university of South Carolina. Nursing ls a very satisfying and rewarding profession for both men and women. And with the wide variations ln the types of nursing to be done today, a person can just about decide what area of health care is best suited to his or her own qualifications. (PHOTOS BY JAMS G. ffTJLSON) When anyone undergoes raretry at General Hospital, he is wheeled directly from the operating room to the recovery room, where team* of nurses carefully watch over him. This photo was made Ju*t after a patient wai broucht in. Left to right, Dr. Lamar Leahman, anestheiLU; Mrs. Ethan Allen, R. N-; and student nunc U n Carolyn Hollowell... In tbe cardiac unit at Greenville General Hospital can keep watch on the heartbeats of patients with tbe monitor, television-type at tbe nursing center which registers from tbe patients' beds. Mrs. William R. Jones watches one here. Receiving treatment on the surgical floor Is Mrs. Annie James, wbo serves as secretary at one of the nursing stations at the hospital. Mre. C. M. Andrews Jr., R. N.. rich!, adjusts the nose tube as student nurse, Mrs. Mike McCollum, watches. The Bird respirator In the Intensive care unit »t General assists patients with breathing difficulties. The Instrument Is used extensively in this department, but Is also available for use in other parts ot the hospital. Mrs. W. J. Greene, a Greenville General graduate, uses the respirator here on a patient. Among the new equipment at the hospital are the navel feeders for premature babies. The tube ls Inserted In the open navel and the nurses press an air tube to assist tbe babies In breathing as they are fed. Here, Mrs. H. R. Seifried, left. head nurse and Lancaster, Pa., General Hospital graduate; and Mrs. N. D. Chassie, a Vanderbilt graduate and Boston University clinical specialist, feed two premature babies in the incubators. 70-79 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] GREENVILLE PIEDMONT July 28, 1970 THE GREENVILLE • Hospital Bonds Sold At Low Interest By JOAN McKINNEY Governmental Affairs Editor County and G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital System officials were pleased today with the opening of bids on a $6 million bond sale for construction of new hospital facilities on Grove Road. Interest rates were well below what officials had anticipated. Apparent low bidder was Solomon Brothers of New York at an average interest rate of 5.6554, or in dollar values, $3.18 million. When presenting the request for authorization for bond sale to Greenville County Council, hospital officials said they feared interest rates could rise to 7 per cent. Today Robert Toomey, executive director of the system, said the 7 per cent figure was based on information the system received from bond attorneys during a meeting in the last week of May. Interest rate was 7.12 at that time, he said. Toomey said he was "extremely gratified" at the results of today's opening. "We want what we're doing to be accomplished at the least possible cost to the taxpayers," he said. Other bidders on the sale were Chase Manhattan Bank, 5.7139, average interest rate or $3.22 million; Lehman Brothers a n d Associates, 5.7778 or $3.25 million; Halsey, Stuart & Co., Inc., and Associates, 5.7460 or $3.24 million; First National Cil$/ Bank, of New York, 5.7858 or $3.26 million; Wachovia National Bank and Trust Co. of North Carolina, 5.7967 or $3.26 million. • -. . . . . . :•.. •;.::•' • . •• • : : . . • . : . . : . . . • •' ' \ •;.; NEWS July 30, 1970 . . . ;.: • BOND BIDS OPENED — Greenville Hospital System and county officials look over bids for $6 million in bonds for hospital construction at the bid opening Tuesday. Seated, from left, Robert E. Toomey, director of the system; Willie Jones, county treasurer; Har- ry Daniel of Greer, secretary of the hospital system's board of trustees; and, standing, Ralph Blakely, chairman of Greenville County Council. (Greenville News photo by Bennie J. Granger) $6-Mi.lion Hospital Bond Issue Sold A $6 million,county bond issue for hospital construction has been sold to Solomon Brothers of New York. The company's low bid of 5.655409 average interest rate for a cost of $3,189,650.50 on the 15-year bonds was accepted after nine bids for the bonds were opened Tuesday. Robert E. Toomey, director of the Greenville Hospital System, Co., Inc., and A s s o c i a t e s , said he was ' ' e x t r e m e l y 5.746070. gratified" by the results of the Also, First National City Bank bidding. GHS officials had anticipated interest rates might be of New York, 5.7858; Wachovia! National Bank and Trust Co. of as high as seven per cent. Other bidders and the average North Carolina, 5.7967; Morgan interest bid included Chase Guaranty Trust Co., 5.79913; Manhattan .Bank, 5 . 7 1 3 9 ; Trust Company of Georgia, Lehman Brothers and Associat- 5,845478; and Phelps, Fenn & es, 5.777869; Halsey, Stuart & Co., 5,82185. 70-80 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] G r e e n v i l l e N e w s - A u g u s t 5, 1970 . . . . . : • • • DLg HOME WEEK — It was time for ivmimsilngt^-hen the Alumnae Association of Green.*iHe ^feneral Hospital School of Nursing had its annual meeting and reunion. From left at the nurses' residence are Mrs. Susan Jones, member of the hospital staff who is outgoing president of the alumnae associa- Emergency Room Has No Normal Day "An average day seldom occurs" in the emergency room at Greenville General Hospital, hospital officials say. Many factors influence the workload each day in the emergency room. These include the day of the week, the hour, the weather, whether it is raining, sun shining or sleeting, whether it is a holiday or not, and whether children are in school or out. Each month, 3,475 patients come to the emergency room. Hospital officials said that in the past year there have been 41,907 visits to the emergency room, with 6,311 of these resulting in admissions to the hospital. The average period of four weeks s h o w s 485 admissions, or 17.3 admissions per day. These statistics compare with 30,500 emergency room patients In 1960 and 36,000 in 1965. The lowest number o f admissions occurred during the period with the highest number of visits. This was during the middle of the summer while tion; Mrs. John W. Callaham „of ^children were out of school, and member of the Class of 1911, vend.,Miss Gail there were more accidents, but Moore of Greer, student body president who of. a less serious nature. The highest number o f will be graduated from the school of nursing Sept. 11. (Greenville News photo by Bennie J. Granger) 70-81 admissons occurred during the period with the next lowest number of visits. The time was during the winter, and the accidents were due to ice on sidewalks and streets, and illnesses due to cold weather. Thus, fewer accidents, but more serious in nature. Holidays or holiday weekend have a definite impact on the emergency room. Any hour of any day can be a peak time in the emergency room on a holiday weekend. The emergency room becomes busy at approximately 7 p.m. the day before the holiday and stays busy until about 2 a.m. Tuesday morning. The most critical hours in the emergency room at Greenville General are from 6 p. m. to 2 a. m., w h e n great pressures are placed on physicians and staff to handle the patient load. An attempt was made to determine what an average day in the emergency room is. There is no such day. Seasons of the year, especially^pinter and inclement weathM^ affect the situation, and one" important factor for consideration i s whether children are in school or not. The daily report during a given f o u r - w ee k period represents 131 emergency room visits. Of these, 19 of the emergency room patients were admitted. Of these, 84 persons live in the city of Greenville; 34 are residents of Greenville County; 13 were from outside Greenville County, aifinhree were out-ofstaters, passing through the environs of Greenville. In a day's time, 93 entered the emergency room as "walking cases;" 12 young children were carried in the arms of parents or friends; ^ine arrived in wheel chairs, and 17 by ambulance. Emergency room p a t i e n t s generally can be categorized in two divisions — a c c i d e n t victims, and n o n - a c c i d e n t patients. During the period of a day, 63 patients are "accident" victims, and 68 are non-accident. Attention given by physicians to meet individual requirements of patients include medical, 84 leases; surgical, 27 cases, and orthopedic patients, 20 cases. j While hosiital staff members :ln the emergency room agree <an "average day" n e v e r jhappens, they report that each I day will involve the following, | among all other types of emergency room patients: one dog bite; one possible rape; one assault and beating; one child (under seven years of age), with accidental poisoning; two adults suffering f r o m overdose of drugs; six to receive injections, after doctors' office hours; one gunshot victim; one alcoholic patient; seven on-thejob injuries, some of serious nature; four or five coronary cases; 10 to 15 automobile accident victims; and at least one dead on arrival. Members of the Emergency Room Physicians' service, with Dr. D. E. "Andy" Wallar as chief, are on fulltime duty in the emergency room. They serve 10 and 14-hour shifts, scheduled on a rotating basis, and on one day each week, the Emergency Room Service I physician works a stretch of 118 hours. G r e e n v i l l e N e w s - A u g u s t 16, [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] 1970 The G r e e r Citizen A u g u s t 19, 1970 Expansion Program For Hospital Is Announced Work l a y Begin •V •_£ Next December m Preliminary architectural drawings for the $2,546,000 expansion program at Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital at Greer have been completed and received by the Greenville Hospital System, Chairman W. W. McEachern of the Board of Trustees announced. •Architect's Drawing Of Expansion Program' At Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital PICTURED IS THE ARCHITECT'S rendering for the S2,546,000 expansion program at Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital in Greer, with anticipated construction work on the first phase of the project scheduled to begin in December of this year. Local Hospital Plans Expansion ved his interneship at St. Luke's (Continued From Front Page) Hospital, Bethlehem, Pa., and serpital. Careful attention has been given ved his surgical residency at Docto expansion requirements ior the tor's Hospital in Washington and St. Luke's in Bethlehem. Pa. He served future, it was noted. William H. Botts, director of in the United States Navy from 19planning and development for the 42 to December 3, 1944, when he Greenville Hospital System, said was killed in action at Ormoc Bay, chat the preliminary architectural L*yte, in the Philippine Islands. The Allen Bennett Memorial Hosdrawings are now being studied and work should be started soon on the pital was completed and occupied in 1953. with 27 beds. It was later working drawings. enlarged during two construction On. Ten Acre Tract The Allen Bennett Memorial Hos- programs to increase its capacity to 63 beds. Diagnostic and treat pital and Roger Huntington Nurs ing Center are situated on a ten- nent facilities have never been en ure tract donated for hospital pur- larged, although the hospital selposes by Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Bennett, ves an area with an estimated popu in honor of their son. Lieutenan, lation of 43,000 persons. The Roger Huntington Nursinj Selton Allen Bennett, Jr., Medical Center, with SO beds, named in hon Corps, USNR. The young physician, a surgeon. Dr of the late Roger S. Huntington was a graduate of Virginia Military who served ior more than 20 year Institute and received his medical as Chairman of the Board of Green iegree from the University of Vir- ville General Hospital and was th< ginia Medical School. He took his first chairman of the Board of Trus master's degree in science at the tees of the Greenville Hospital Sys University of Pennsylvania. He ser- tern, was opened in April, 1963. Working drawings will be started soon, and it is anticipated construction work on the Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital project can begin in late December, he said. Director Robert E. Toomey pointed out that the Greer construction program will provide expanded ancilliary services, such as X-ray and Laboratories, which have been badly needed ior many years, as well as increased space for delivery rooms, operating rooms, emergency room, physical therapy and oxygen therapy and nursing areas. The present bed capacity to Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital will be increased to 100 beds. The new hospital will be topped by a floor for nursing areas. The structure has been planned and programmed for adding five more floors later, giving the hospital an eight-storied facility. These additional floors at a later date will give Allen Bennett Hospital a capacity of 300 beds. Extensive Planning Mr. Toomey said extensive and comprehensive planning for enlarging the Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital has taken the better part of a year. The new structure will be located immediately behind the existing hospital facility, adjoining it and the Roger Huntington Nursing Center. Designed by J. Harold Mack Associates, Architects, the new structure will harmonize with the existing facilities, and will give the Greer area a modern, up-to-date hos(Continued on Page 6-A) 70-82 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] m* M Greenville News Greenville News S e p t e m b e r 1, 1970 Greenville's Health Welfare Needs Outlined The growing community needs 'I think the third basic to plan more health and welfare problem is the polarization of |Services — but, more than this, attitudes and ideas t h a t it needs to implement programs permeates every strata of our already developed, William C. social, political and religious inRipley Jr., executive director stitutions and I'm afraid that of the Greenville County Com- no specific social service can munity Council, said Monday. be set up to combat this," "Our entire board has been Ripley said. engaged in reshaping and re- He said it's good for Greenstructuring attitudes, particular- ville to plan physical needs it ly as this relates to implemen- will have in 15 or 20 years tation of the study and planning but that clearly defined social planning is equally important. process," Ripley said. "I don't think Greenville is "Urban renewal and highway unique in this — I don't think building both cause people to any social planning body has move and to relocate which fredevoted enough of its time to quently creates new social the implementation process," problems, he said. He said that because the he said. Social planning involves three present system of i n c o m e ibasic components: identification maintenance for the poor is inadequate, it is being challengof the problem, devising a plan ed. to solve the problem, and, most "That's something we can't HOSPITAL PROJECT — An artist's con- a nursing floor expected to begin in Decem- 'important, implementation of be particularly proud of but its the first two steps, Ripley true — the government had to ception shows how the Allen Bennett Memorial ber. The structure will face Wade Hampton said. tell the social workers, that the Hospital in Greer will look with the additional Boulevard and1 will adjoin the present Roger Commenting on local situa- present system w a s intions for which help is needed, nursing floors on top of construction of two adequate," he said. Huntington Nursing Center. he said "drug abuse is a matter He said he feels that the way levels of diagnostic and treatment areas and of great concern and interest the food stamp program is being to thousands of Greenvillians. utilized here is evidence that .Coordination of community ef- many Greenvillians were not forts is necessary if the problem getting enough food before the is to be met head-on, he said. program was introduced. Another serious local prob- Ripley said that without doubt lem is the polarization of in the past three years, greatly problem is the need for more increased amounts of federal practical means of transporta- money are coming into the comoperating rooms, emergency tion for the poor and the aging, munity to provide food, health room, physical therapy and oxas pointed up in a recent study services, and training programs ygen therapy and n u r s i n g made here by The Greenville for the unemployed liiicT the areas. County Council for Community underemployed. Robert E. Toomey, director Actions, he said. of the hospital system, said the He said the entire welfare expansion has been badly needprogram is being operated on ed for many years. The bed a more: adequate level than ever capacity will be increased to before, but conceded "that it 100 beds. would benefit from much closer Future expansion will include coordination. an additional floor for nursing Working draw areas, and five floors which will to be comple| give the new hospital a 300 The consto bed capacity. *j i incade aa The new stru%xe will be located immediate!!- behind the existing hospital facility and will adjoin Roger Huntington Nurs-' ing Center. Allen Bennett Memorial Hospilal To Begin New Expansion Program 70-83 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] THE G R E E N V I L L E NEWS S e p t e m b e r 2 , 1970 Greenville Hospital Divisions Are-Given Full Accreditation All hospital divisions of the and the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital and Roger ppqjjpgton Nursing Center, and James, i1 Greenville Hospital System Hospital on Grove Road. have been approved for accre- L. Stanton Tuttle, administra- Binder is admin sifcty/ 0 Billditation by the Joint Commis- tor of internal operations, and crest Hospital at'^rmBsoWille. sion on Accreditation of Hospi- Mrs. Marie R. Harris, adminis- The more recenuy opened ditals, Chairman W. W. McEach- trator of nursing operations, a-e visions of the Greenvifle Hospern of the board of trustees was in administrative charge of ital System divisions are administered by M chael, M Greenville General Hospital. informed Tuesday. The accreditation and approv- Robert L. Smith is adminis- at William G. SirMfe Bhilai, al is for two years, or until a trator of the two Greer divi- and by Frank D. Pindcney at subsequent survey is conducted, sions, Alien Bennett Memorial Marshall I. Pickens Hospital. Dr. John D. Porterfield, director of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, Chicago, said. Dr. Robert E. Toomey, director of the Greenville system and Dr. E. Arthur Dreskin, president of the medical staff, were cited for their close coopA community information and and r e 1 _ p V i i s opportunities, eration and efforts in conductreferral service, A. 1. D., for health ana social welfare, and ing the surveys. individuals with almost any business in the greater Greenproblem or need, is expected ville area," Mrs. O'Neill said. The Greenville Hospital Systo be in full operations here The A. I. D. phone is 268-1722 tem was commended for mainearly in October. and speakers, a film, and a taining standards deserving of It is sponsored by the Junior brochure d e s c r i b i n g the accreditation and for constant League of Greenville Inc., the program's work are available, efforts to improve the quality of Liberty Corporation and the she said. patient care" Greenville Hospital System. She said A. I. D. is a two-way The evaluation for the six Mrs. Nancy S. O ' N e i l l , street. hospital divisions results, from a associated with the hospital survey conducted in July by are providihg a service system since 1958, will serve for"We field representatives, the community — especially as executive director. were Greenvil^p' to newcomers, but we are also Trained volunteers w i l l providing a service for the agenital fn. Mallaird answer telephoned questions Bennett Memorial _. cies and institutions of the concerning Greenville organiza- area," she said. •Roger Huntington Nursing Cenanclservices, Mrs. O'Neill ter at Greer; Hillcrest Hospital, The program has been under Simpsonville; William G. Sirdevelopment since J a n u a r y "''A. i. 'D. will serve as a rine Hospital, Pendleton Street, central clearing house of in- when the Greenville Hospital formation about cultural, civic System assigned Mrs. O'Neill the task of developing an information service for health agencies, William C. Ripley, executive director of the Greenville County Community Council, explained. Ripley said the service is not a "common intake" for health and welfare agencies, but that it has "follow-up" built into it. "I think it represents a big step1 forward for the community," he said. A. I. D. is under the supervision of an executive board made up of Mrs. Richard W. Riley and Mrs. John E. Johnston Jr., representing the Junior League; Mrs. O'Neill, Bill Barrett and. Chaplain John M. Smith representing the Greenville' Hospital S \ William E, Lav Jr. and Leonard A. MaxwBM nting The Community Service ization Liberty 70-84 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] ( i Phillips Hungerfor^H CommuniM^H Ripley f^M as an ex officio board • member. THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT S e p t e m b e r 2, 1970 Of Hospitfd System fjfoayed Accreditation-for all hospital . divisions of the G r e e n v i l l e Hospital System was recently approved by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, board of trustees chairman W. W. McEachern said Tuesday. The accreditation and approval is for two years or until a subsequen|ksurvey is conducted. acctordfl!|^|p a notice sent the mat& by Dr. John D. Porterfield of Chicago, director of the joint-dommission. The survey was Conducted by field representatives here in July. MRS. O'NEILL THE GREENVILLE Information Service Initiated September 3, NEWS 1970 Hospitals Program Funded Mrs. Nancy S. O'Neill, a •member of the administrative staff of the Greenville Hospital System since 1958, has been appointed executive director of Assistance Information Direc tion, (AID), greater Greenville's new information and referral service. Mrs. O'Neill will supervise the work of trained volunteers who will provide answers to callers' questions concerning cultural, civic and religious opportunities, health and social welfare agen cies and business in the Greenville area. A native of Atlanta, Mrs. O'Neill is a graduate of Columbia University and the Atlanta Law School. She worked as a staff member at the Doctors AID is a joint project of The Hospital of New York before (Liberty Corporation, the Junior joining the Greenville hospital League of Greenville, Inc., and administration. She has served as director Greenville Hospital S y s t e m . Mrs. O'Neill will continue as of community relations and has an employe of the hospital worked on s p e e i a i system, while Liberty will ministrative assignments for furnish office space and equip- Greenville Hospital S y s t e m ment and Junior League will since 1958. AID will begin operation in provide a fulltime secretary and October. volunteer help. The Appalachian R e g i o n a l Commission has approved a grant of $141,439 for the staffing and operation of a family practice residency program at Greenville General Hospital, U. S. James R. Mann reported Wednesday. The project will recruit at least six family p r a c t i c e residents each year to participate in a t r a i n i n g program designed to alleviate the critical shortage of primary patient care physicians in the South C a r o l i n a Appalachian region. The project is further designed to provide the resident with I broad experience in the various i medical and surgical fields with emphasis on p r e v e n t i v e medicine, iBob Johnson, executive director of the S.C. Appalachian Regional H e a l t h Policy and Planning Council, said. Total costaf the project will be $141,804, lipth the commission -., pep cent and the Greenville Hospital*System the remainder. 70-85 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] T h e G r e e r C i t i z e n - S e p t e m b e r 2, All Greenville Hospital System Divisions Given Accreditation Approval All hospital divisions of the Greenville Hospital Systems have been approved for accreditation by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, Chairman W. W. McEachern of the Board of Trustees was informed yesterday. The accreditation and approval is for a period of two years, or until a subsequent survey is conducted, Dr. John D. Porterfield, director of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, Chicago said. Dr. Robert E. Toomey, director of the Hospital System and Dr. E. Arthur Dreskin, president of the Medical Staff, were cited for their close cooperation and efforts in conducting the surveys. The Greenville Hospital System was commended for maintaining standards deserving of accreditation and for constant efforts to im- prove the quality of patient care. The evaluation for the six hospital divisions results from a survey conducted in July by field representatives. Surveyed were Greenville General Hospital on Mallard Street, Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital and Roger Huntington Nursing Center at Greer; Hillcrest Hospital, Simpsonville; William G. Sirrine Hospital, Pendleton Street, and the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital at the New Grove Road site. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals is sponsored by the four member organizations: American College of Physicians, American College of Surgeons, American Hospital Association and American Medical Association. Certificates of Accreditation will be received by each hopsital division. (Continued on Page 4-A) Greer Girls Will Graduate From Nursing School 1970 Hospital Systems Are Accredited (Continued From Front Page) game", Coach Few reports. Greer's probable starting lineup on offense will feature Robert MilIn administrative charge of Greenville General Hospital are L. Stanton Tuttle. administrator of internal operations, and Mrs. Marie R. Harris, administrator of nursing operations. Robert L. Snt&JHs administrator of the two Gre^^Klivisions, Allen Bennett Mepiorial Hospital and Roger Huntington Nursing Center, and James R. Binder is administrator of Hillcrest Hospital at Simpsonville. The more reecntly opened divisions of the Greenville Hospital System divisions are administered by Michael Masseur at William G. Sirrine Hospital, and by Frank D. Pinckney at Marshall I. Pickens Hospital on Grow Road. The Greer Citizen-September Among 77 seniors graduating from the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing on September 11 are two students from Greer. They are: Sarah Neal McCraw Johnson, 104 Pinewood Drive, and Barbara Gail Moore, Route One. Speaker for the commencement exercises for this largest class in the School of Nursing's 58-year history is Congressman James R. Mann. With this class, the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing will have educated 1,453 young women for the nursing profession. 70-86 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] 9, 1970 • Greenville Piedmont-September 10,1970 Local Hospitals Tighten Regulations On A bortions By MIRIAM GOODSPEED and open heart surgery, but GGH is also requiring that Stringent new Greenville not abortions, thank you," the the three medical doctors who Hospital System policies on official, who asked to remain must perform the examinations and certify the operation must abortion include $300 deposit, unidentified, declared. upon admittance and scounty "It's against our policy," was be members of the Greenville residency of 90 days rather than the only official explanation Hospital System medical staff, a requirement not spelled out state residency as required given. under the law. A medical staff meeting is under the abortion law, passed by the State Legislature last scheduled tonight to discuss the Another added legal clause in the case of married women over January new policies which are apAbortion Interest Movement Parently stricter than the law 21, not living with her husband, president, Mrs. Larry Ballew requires. The new policies, is a written affidavit to the pointed out today that an ^mw e f Y^, apparently are already effect that a third party is the ud in f r o m a c a H husband of her child and that uneducated, poor woman a p - £*«*> J § g has been no cohabitation plying through the hospital clinic m aTh£ e today 1 -ler +„,„„l,ni,0/, «, a there between husband and wife. If has ''little chance of unscrambl-. % ™} . .telephoned the there is any possibility the child ng the many legal forms, l e t hospital admi_»ion office asking could be the separated what e would n e e d t ( b e ad alone coming up with $300 dolla? \ , ' mitted for a proposed abor-"husband's, his signature is rers. tion. quired. A reliable hospital source in- "You will need to bring $300, In cases of divorce, there dicated the usual deposit for an affidavit proving you have must be an affidavit that the surgical procedures is only lived in one county, either child was conceived subse$200. Greenville, Pickens, Anderson, quently to her separation from Many health insurance policies Spartanburg or Laurens, con- her husband and that a third will cover part or all of antinuously for 90 days, and you party is the father of her abortion, however. E. H. E.must have all affidavits and child. Cass, manager of health in- forms filled out," she was Dr. Robert E. Toomey, in surance claims for Liberty Life told. defending the hospital's aborInsurance Co., said today, "Our The state law, as written, re- tion policies said, group and individual policies quires only that a womon have "The hospital system feels it generally provide benefits for been a resident of South has several dimensions in such maternity expenses. Carolina for 90 days before the cases. "If the waiting periods and operation is performed. "First is the medical viewinsuring provisions are complied The policy change points out point, second is its legality with, the claim is payable, and that no private physician or no under the law. the manner in which pregnancy private or non-governmental "Our hospital system, in its is terminated would have nohospital, hospital directors or administration policy decisions, bearing on whether or not the governing board shall be re-must make sure both medical claim is payable." quired to permit human abor- and legal aspects are completely He explained that Liberty Life tions under the law as passed satisfied. policies have no clauses ex-in January. Although GGH uses "Our attorneys give us the cluding payment of benefits in public funds, it does fall under advice to conform to the letter abortion cases. While the claim the non-governmental hospital of the law, the patient can have will be paid, however, the criteria. her own legal advice, and any benefits allotted under the in- The Greenville H o s p i t a l difference can be discussed in dividual's policy determines the System thus reserves the right the courts. amount paid, he explained. to determine when an abortion "We want to be certain, for The hospital will not take a will be performed in any of the protection of our patients, promissory note for an abortion, its units. thot everything is legal and in according to an admissions oftheir best image. ficial. "Not only must we be con"We'll take promissory notes, cerned about our patients, but if you have good financial stanwe also have our public image ding, for appendicitis operations to maintain in t h e community." 70-87 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Greenville News- JARRELL NEWTON S e p t e m b e r 1Z, 1970 McSWAIN M. FRIDDY B. FRIDDY Mann Urges Nursing Graduates To Help Stop War, Inhumanity U.S. Rep. James R. M a m i 0| T ^ ^ ^ ^ r e presented The Greenville General Hostold Greenville General Hospitalfe" ^ 00r ^ yf f J l ^ , ? ^ pital Scholarship awards of rt K nursing school graduates Friday * S ™ ' - ^ o • _1 ! * * $750 was presented to Miss Teto help find alternatives for war G r ^ n v d l e ^ m ^ g A w^ afr d s ' «1 reasa Mae Grist, daughter of and man's inhumanity to man. t h bedside ^ * ' H * Mr. and Mrs. James L. Grist f The world is in d^ep trouble, °? e who have most consist- Jr. of Toccoa, Ga., on the bashe said, because of failure to " ^ Prefaced good bedside is of being the most outstandentir make progress in human and n ur r s inn S wdeun™g *** f P™" ing in theory, practice and t personal qualifications. social sciences used in working 8 _? » to _ five _ graduates with man. And the problem, They were Miss Mary Janice A second scholarship of $250 Mann said, is not technology Hopkins, daughter of Mr. and was awarded to Miss Cathy AnMrs. Walter L. Hopkins, Green- nette McSwain, daughter of J. or science, but man. Speaking at commencement ville; Miss Brenda Kay McCall, D. McSwain, of Spartanburg. exercises for the 77 nursing daughter of Mr. and Mrs.The scholarships are intended school seniors, Mann said that George V. McCall, Rt. 5, Eas- to further the education of the parents and grandparents of to- ley; Miss Valerie Sue Farnell, nurses. day made the "most remark- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Miss Martha Hellen Fridy able progress of any genera- win A. Farnell, Limerick, Ire- was named recipient of the tion" in technology and expand- !and; Missr ixmme Ellen Fish- Alumnae Association Award ed wealth but not wisdom, com- er, daughter of Mr. and Mrs presented to the student who passion, brotherhood and under- Carl D. Fisher, Greenville; and has been outstanding in meetMrs. Linda Jean Rogers Newstanding of self. ing the objectives of the school, Nurses of the future will be ton, of Greenville. exemplified loyalty to t h e designers and leaders of a team, The Holmes Trophy Award, school, profession and communiMann said, because medicine given annually by Mrs. John M. demands a sensitivity to and Holmes a former hospital super- tyintendent, was presented to Miss f, ^r P" blic ,. Relations Award interaction with society. promotion of "Ideals are desirable but new Barbara Gail Moore, daughter i n°t e r eoutstanding s t i n t h e S C S t a t e Stu ideas are absolutely necessary of ™ the «u* Rev. and Mre. Jack L. , e tn tNurse >„ - c i v"i c to man's survival," he said. i Moore of Rt. 1, Greer. The ° _ * "d * * ? * h r ^ 3 L ™ He reminded graduates that;trophy is awarded by the fac- *6 * £ » « JMiss * t 'Barbara S S S *Allen * ^ to happiness is not a ^destination j ulty on the basis of scholarship, Fridy, twin sister of, Miss but a journey. I outstanding nursing ability and Martha aFridy. cl,aracler '70-88 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Gjreenville N e w s - S e p t e m b e r 12, 1970 Cify Hospitals Developing Policy For Legal Abortiotis >____. *^ • • Greenville Hospital System is Hospital officials said it is threaten the life or gravely imdeveloping a policy on legal important that all legal aspects pair the mental or physical abortions. required by the state statute health of the woman" or "there The system is seeking to on abortions are met. Legal is substantial risk that the child assure that admissions for abor- documents required by the would be • born with grave tions will conform with South hospital before admission for physical or mental defect." Carolina statutes and that the an abortion are consistent with Abortion also is allowed when health care, jpf. the community state law, according to the pregnancy reacted , from an alleged rape or thcestubus relaat large is-protected, officials system's legal counsel. said. * They said the system has at- tionship, provided the offense The hospital medical staff torneys to insure that the is reported witi_rih a specified discussed at a Thursday night hospital conforms to the law. period and other conditions are meeting recommendations con- No private physician, private met. cerning the admission of pa- o r non-govemment hospital, tients for legal abortions. The hospital directors or governing staff requested a committee of body can be required to permit physicians to make a further abortions, according to state study of the recommendations. law. The statute also says that The system administration no civil liability or other has recommended that abortions disciplinary or recriminatry acperformed in Greenville County tion can be brought because hospitals be limited to residents of a refusal to 'permit aborof Greenville, P i c k e n s , tion. Anderson, Spartanburg a n d The state law allows abortion Laurens counties. The proposal in cases where "there is a has been submitted to a medical substantial risk that continstaff committee for study and uance of pregnancy would recommendations. The board of trustees will take final action. Pressures are being placed on the facilities and staffs of the Greenville Hospital System to perform abortions on individuals who are from distant communities and areas, a hospital spokesman said. The recommendation in the proposed abortion policies that abortions be performed only on residents of Greenville County and the four surrounding counties is based on crowded conditions in all divisions of the system and pressures f o r available p a t i e n t s ' accommodations and operating rooms. Officials said it is necessary for the hospital system to enforce a financial policy requiring out-of-county residents seeking admission for legal abortions or other elective m e d i c a l1 procedures, to make an advance deposit or to provide adequate insurance coverage. On severali occasions, patients seeking abortions have given the hospjfal fictitious names and addresses,; making it impossible for the hospital to be reimbursed for medical and hospital services, officials said. Greenville County residents seeking admission for abortions with inadequate insurance coverage also will be asked to make an advance deposit. If the deposit cannot be made, other financial arrangements 70-89 will be made^ [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] . G r e e n v i l l e N e w s - S e p t e m b e r 13, 1970 2w,ertnination By GARNETTE BANE Mrs. Earlene Scott is a shining example of her own philosphy. "You can do anything you really want to do," she says, "you can find the time if you put forth the effort." The attractive mother and housewife who has more initative than an army of women, returned recently to Greenville General Hospital after a two-year leave of absence to study nursing. She was first employed by Mass Myrtle Long at the hospital Aug. 23, 1960, as a nurses aide in the newborn nursery. With the encouragement of Miss Long, supervisor of nursing in the delivery room, Mrs. Scott left the hospital to get her high school diploma and study practical nursing. She came back to work in 1964 as a LPN and worked until September 1968 when she entered the University of S o u t h Carolina in Spartanburg to study nursing. "I had always dreamed about being a teacher," she says, "but after working as an aide, I knew nursing was what I really wanted to do." Everyone, from family to hospital staff, encouaged her. "I just kept nagging her," says Miss Long, "it was easier r L^amd W o m a n t/urde'd L a for her to go on to school than to listen to me nag. I had confidence in her. I saw her potential." According to Mrs. Scott, the roles at home changed when she started college. "The children would tell me not to worry and to keep my chin up when 1 was bogged down — the same things I had often told them." She says her husband, Harold, and their five children sacrificed a lot so she could pursue her career. "Each child was responsible for his own chores. The washing, ironing and cleaning kept them interested," she says, "and my husband worked two jobs. He's worked two jobs ever since we've been married." Mrs. Scott feels that her two years on campus has helped her understand her own teenagers better. "The students in my class were the same age as my oldest," she says. "After they found out I was as old as their parents, they'd come to me with their problems relating to the generation gap and I'd talk things over with them." to get her diploma. "I had a rating of 11.9 out of the required 12 grade standing, so I really didn't have too much work to do." In three weeks, she received her high school certificate. She enrolled in the LPN course at Sterling High School while doing clinical work at the hospital. Miss Long was so impressed with Mrs. Scott's ability when she returned to work as an LPN that she continued to nudge her on. "In fact," says Mrs. Scott, "Mrs. Jane Jones, the head nurse in obstetrics, also began to encourage me by continually picking my brain." With the backing of the hospital's education program to aid personnel financially, she commuted 60 miles a day to Spartanburg where she was named the most versatile student in her class. "I'm an organizer," she says, as she tells of her extracurricular activities. She was a member of the student government, a local and state representative for the International Relations Club, a S.C. counselor for The School of Student Nurses and a member of the Photography Club. While in college, she did her clinical work at Spartanburg General Hospital and was graduated with a B average. "My children were the reason behind the good grades. I just couldn't come home and tell them their mother had flunked out." Going to college w a s something she had thought o: doing for a long time however, she wanted to se< that her children went first After realizing that in a feu years there would be at leas three in college, she decidec to go on then. During hei last year, Harold Jr., 19, wa: a student at Morris College This year, he and Marilyn 18, both are students there "We had to put very littli money with what he had earn ed to go to school on," sh< says. Other Scott children an Angela, 16, Gerald, 15, an< Kenneth, 12. She passed the state board nursing exam with n o Although she loves her worl problems. "I was so excited I kept telling everyone that in the delivery room, Mrs I had passed and all they Scott is not content. "I wan would say was, 'I knew you to get my B.S. in nursing now," she says. "I'll take ; would.' few academic courses in th< "If I gave a little piece summer so I can narrow i of my certificate to everyone down to just nursing subjects who helped me, I'd only have It may take anywhere fron a tiny portion left," she adds, two to five years, but I'n smiling. When Mrs. Scott decided to become a practical nurse, she took the high school equivalency exam to determine how much study she would need PRAISE MOM — Mrs. Earlene Scott's, ploma from the University of South Carolina's Spartanburg Regional Campus. Anchildren, from left, Kenneth, Angela, Gerald and Harold Jr., admire their mother's di- other daughter, Marilyn, is away at college. GOOD LUNGS — A newborn baby at Greenville General Hospital gives out a yell j as Dr. James Puckett hands it to nurse Earlene Scott. 70-90 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Greenville Piedmont S e p t e m b e r 15, 1970 Hospital Director Honored HOUSTON, Tex. - Robert E* Toomey, director Greenville (S.C.) Hospital System, accepting a 50-year membership plaque from the American Hospital Association said hospitals should not fear government control. Toomey, in remaks to the AHA convention, said the voluntary system will continue and that during 200 years of existence, "our government has never socialized any industry, i "Our task is to move ahead1 as a private industry which will control those segments of the industry which may be tempted to exploit the individual citizen and to continue to operate onj a humanitarian basis." Toomey m a d e acceptance remarks in behalf of all 43 hospitals receiving the award. GreenviUe General H o s p i t a l joined AHA in its second year and was the only hospital in the South to receive t h e G r e e n v i l l e P i e d m o n t - S e p t e m b e r 16,1970 Funds Go For Isolette GREER — Alien Bennett Memorsil Hospital will receive a new isolette within the next few weeks as a result of the 1969 caroling p r o g r a m sponsored annually, by the Auxiliary to G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital. Robert Smith, hospital administrator, said the new unit will include the latest devices and will cost approximately $1,125. Auxiliary workers noted that the isolette will exhaust the 1969 caroling funds collection. It was explained that all funds collected are to be' used with no surplus, therefore timing the last purchase seemed to coincide with plans for the \\\~a\\\\\\\\\\\\\~ 70-91 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] new caroling project. Preliminary plans are being made for the 1970 project, during which children sing and collect funds for children patients of any of the Units in the Greenville H o s p i t a l System. The Greenville News S e p t e m b e r 2 6 , 1970 Dr. 1£pg | Dies At 45 Dr. Sam'* Morgan King, 45, of 6 Marshall Court, died Saturday. Born in Vero Beach, Fla., he was a son of George W. King of Vero Beach and the late Mable Clark King. He had serv- | ed as chairman of the depart- | ment of obstetrics and gynecology at G r e e n v i l l e General and St. F r a n c i s hospitals and was in private practice at the time of his death. He was a member of the Greenville County, S.C. State and American Medical associations and was a founding fellow of the S.C. Obstetrical and Gynecologial Association. He was a fellow of the American j College of Obstetrics a n d Gynecology and the South Atlantic Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and was a diplomate of the American Board of Obstetrics a n d Gynecology.. He received his premedical education at the University of Miami, Fla., and his Doctor of Medicine degree from the Medical College of S o u t h Carolina. He did intern work at Greenville General Hospital, practiced in Simpsonville and served a tour of duty in the Air Force before returning to Greenville General to complete a three-year residency i n obstetrics and gynecology. He was a member of First Baptist Church. Surviving also are his wife, Mrs. Janet Phillips King; two sons, Clark Phillips and Sam Morgan King Jr. of the home; a brother, Lloyd King of Melbourne, Fla.; and t w o sisters, Mrs. Howard Hines of Golden Meadows, La., and Mrs. Edgar Cooper of Jacksonville, Fla. Funeral services will be Monday at 11 a.m. at First Baptist Church. Burial will • be in Woodlawn Memorial Park. The family requests that flowers be omitted and any memorials be' made to the building fund of First Baptist Church. The body is at The Mackey Mortuary and will be placed in the church at 10 a.m. Monday. _H_.llllllll__________^^^^^^HH^___________________________________i 70-92 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Greenville Piedmont O c t o b e r 1, 1970s RETIREES HONORED — Robert E. Toomey, director, Greenville Hospital System, congratulates six Greenville General Hospital employes at a special reception Wednesday in honor of their retirement. From left are Toomey, Moses Wheeler with 44 years of service; Miss Claire Richbourg, 36 years; Mrs. Mary Brock, 33 years; Mrs. Grace Townsend, 30 years; Mrs. Rosa Garlington, 23 years; and Willie Hunt, 17 years. (Greenvile News photo by Leon E. Carnes) Six Retiring Hospital Employes Honored For 183 Years7 Service Greenville General Hospital cluding 'the Business a n d Toomey said, for 12 years giving honored six retiring employes Professional Women's C l u b , close attention to innumerable Order of the Eastern Star and details until promoted to with a reception Wednesday. Daughters of the Nile having manager of the uniform departExperience on the job of the served as an officer at local, ment. six employes, all 70 years old, state, regional levels. Mrs. Rosa Broadnax GarlMrs. Mary Brock will retire ington, R.N., a member of the totals 183 years. Moses Wheeler, with 44 years from her duties on the dietary nursing staff for 23 years, also will retire Oct. 1. ju> of service, established a record staff with 33 years of service. of longevity in employment at She came to GGH from a She was graduaetd flpm Greenville General having serv- training school in 1937 and began Benedict College in 1921 and ed the hospital longer than any to make her culinary abilities was employed on the hospital other employe. known by her salads and baking, nursing staff at v a r i o u s Known to most as "Moses", Toomey said. She advanced periods. Wheeler came to GGH in 1926 rapidly to private cook and to Nursing officials describe Mrs. and was employed as an orderly night cook and in 1966 left the Garlington as an expert in the on the nursing staff. He became hospital to retire. a favorite on the staff, and But when she learned she was nursing care of burn patients especially of children in needed on the dietary staff, she and that she excels in bedside pediatrics, through special at- returned, Toomey said. And dur- nursing, Toomey said. tention, friendship and loyalty, ing her 33 years with the Willie Hunt began his hospital Robert E. Toomey, hospital hospital, her only absence from career 17 years ago as a director, said. regular duties was for a three- member of the housekeeping Miss Claire Richbourg, with week hospital stay. Mrs. Brock, department but special claim the hospital for 36y2 years, a widow, also is the mother to him was made by physicians, nursing staff and patients in reported for her job as book- of seven children. keeper Jan. 1, 1934. Mrs. Grace Townsend .was the obstetrical unit, Toomey "Through the years, she has first employed as assistant said. given detailed attention ef- housekeeper 30 years ago and The six employes also reo ed congratulatory letters fn ficiently with dignity a n d will retire Thursday. dispatch^ flhpmey said. She was promoted to ex- Gov. Robert E. McNair, U, She hasHfeen active in civic ecutive housekeeper and filled Rep. James Mann and Mitoor and community organizations in- this demanding p o s i t i o n , R. Cooper White qBrntnenaTng them for their serWce to the hospital and the community. 70-93 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville Piedmont O c t o b e r 1, 1970 Volunteer Chaplaincy Service Officers New officer of the Volunteer Chaplaintopipllce of Greenville Genj eral Ho_j|rcai -are, left to right, Rev. Allen Long, ffrj^ident; Rev. Louis H. : . Cross, vice president; and Rev. Eugene : W. Lawrence?*secretary. Long, pastor of Lee Road Methodist Church has been a volunteer chaplain si) Cross, Tremont Avenue Cl h God, a volunteer chaplain sij 1 and Lawrence, of White OaK? Baptist Church, a volunteer chaplain since 1948. (Piedmont photo by Bennie Granger) 70-94 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville Piedmont O c t o b e r 2, 1970 Gilkerson. Ramsaur Elected Tc^County Foundation Ro\ Announcement of the election of E. A. Ramsaur and Yancey Gilkerson to the Greenville County Foundation's board of trustees was made today by chairman Caldwell Harper. Harper also told of committees selected to serve this year. Ramsaur, executive v i c e president and a s s o c i a t e publisher of The GreenviUe News-Piedmont, and Gilkerson, president of the Textile Hall Corp., were elected to six-year terms on the f o u n d a t i o n ' s board. Other board members, in addition to Harper, are S. Lewis Condron, Mitchell P a t t o n , Howard Lamar, W i l l i a m Rosenfeld, T. C. Cleveland and James H. Woodside. Vice chairman of the foundation is William Rosenfeld. Mrs. Thurston H. Nicholson is secretary, and Mitchell Patton, treasurer. Committee chairmen named YANCEY GILKERSON by Harper for the year are: finance, Mitchell P a t t o n , chairman; projects, James H. Roy Hunt, James Ryan Jr., Woodside; public information, Earle Sargent, D. L. Scurry, M. Elliott Taylor; music and Owen G. Shell Jr., and William arts, Mrs. Jack C. Ward; special Merritt and Caldwell Harper, committee on real properties, ex-officio. Charles A. Gibson. Projects — W o o d s i d e , Harper announced that T. C. chairman; Mrs. F. A. Abbott, Cleveland had accepted the Guy Gunter, Mrs. John Hamchairmanship for the annual mett, J. Larry Jameson, Dr. foundation dinner. Date of the Leslie Meyer, Hunter Park, William Rasenfeld, Mrs. Harold dinner wM be announced. Serving with the various com- R. Turner, and Mrs. Jack C. Ward. mittees will be: Finance - Patton, chairman; Public Information — Taylor, RAMSAUR chairman; McNeill Carpenter, Ben Geer Keys, Dave Partridge, and Mrs. Richard V. Slaker Jr. Music and Arts — Mrs. Ward, chairman; Howard Lamar, Mrs. E. Arthur Dreskin,a M r s . Margaret Gilliam, JaclrA. Moi ris Jr., Mrs. Richard H. ttiinn and Mrs. David Tillinghast,.. Special committefcjgiltfrreal properties — Gibson, chairman; S. Lewis Condron and C. Vincent Brown. 70-95 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Greenville Newsl |October 3 , 1970 County Foundation !3 Gilkerson, Ramsaur Elected As Trustees Yancey Gilkerson and E. A.is vice chairman of the foun-t Ramsaur have been elected to dation. Mrs. Thurston H.] the board of trustees of theNicholson is secretary, and PatGreenville County Foundation, ton is treasurer. chairman Caldwell Harper an- Harper also announced the nounced Friday. selection of committees for the Gilkerson, president of thecoming year. C o m m i t t e e Textile Hall Corp., a n d chairmen are: Mitchell Patton, Ramsaur, executive vice presi- finance; James H. Woodside, dent and associate publisher of projects; M. Elliott Taylor, JThe Greenville News-Piedmont, public information; Mrs. Jack were elected to six-year terms C. Ward, music and arts, and Charles A. Gibson,, special comon the foundation's board. mittee on real properties. Other board members include Harper announced wSt T. C. S. Lewis Condron, Mitchell Pat- Cleveland had a c' C'$i p t e d ton, Howard Lamar, William chairmanship for ti« annual Rosenfeld, T. C. Cleveland and foundation dinner. The date of James H. Woodside. Rosenfeld the dinner will be announced. The Greenville Piedmont! O c t o b e r 1>, 1 9 7 0 Mrs. Parker Tells Medical Auxililarv Of Needs Mrs. Thomas Parker, president of the Auxiliary to the South Carolina Medical Association, left, was speaker a t the fall luncheon of the Auxiliary to the GreenviUe Medical Society Monday at the Poinsett Club. With her are Dr. Charlton P. Armstrong, president of the county medical society, and Mrs. George M. Grimball, local auxiliary president. (Photo by Fletcher W. Ross) membership ot i,U6» write tne Also welcomed were past Doctors' wives must know reported that bulbs to be sold men's society has 1,725, This presidents in attendance: Mrs. the ties, rules, regulations and to raise funds for mecial leaves, she noted, at least I. H. Grimball, Mrs. R. M. invasion of privacy connected scholarships will be ready to 6 able, intelligent wives Pollitzer, Mordecai with socialized medicine and distribute at the next meeting waiting to ^hare in the Nachman, Mrs. Mrs. Perry Bates, do something about it now and it was announced the auxiliary's accomplishment. Mrs. McMurry Wilkins Jr., or they will lose their free deadline is h e a r for She pointed out it is the Mrs. L. H. Taylor Jr., Mrs. way of life, Mrs. Thomas subscribing to the American membership's responsibility to Lucius M. Cline, Mrs. J Parker told members of the Medical Association Education reach these — prove it Robert Thomason, Mrs. Calvin Auxiliary to the Greenville and Research Foundation for is more than a to social club T. Smith, Mrs. T. C. County Medical Society at its its diristmas card project. and to inform them the Stoudemayer, Mrs. Marion fall luncehon at the Poinsett To join this, one sends money community program, of which Waters, Mrs. Wayne Brady, Club Monday. to the foundation in lieu of includes s c h o l a r s h i p s , Mrs. Parker, Mrs. Willian Mrs. Parker, president of spending money on cards to legislation, safety, health and Bannen, Mrs. E. A. Dreskin, the Auxiliary to the South members. other areas. Mrs. John K. Webb. Carolina Medical Association, Mrs. Brady, chairman of Mrs. Jim F. Hicks gave She continued by saying the prefaced this remark by hostesses, and Mrs. W. Esley wives have a tremendous the invocation and M r s . asking members to join the Jones, co-chairman, w e re impactcan for good in presenting Malvern C. Holland requested American Medical Political assisted by Mrs. C. M. Easley, . their husbands' and new, unwrapped Christmas Action Committee (AMPAC) Mrs. T. K. Howard, Mrs. J. that it is a veryimages honor gifts for patients in state which informs members of P. Matthews Jr, Mrs R. C to be a member real of such a mental institutions. T h i s political movements in the McLane, Mrs. J. W. McLean group. Operation Santa Claus is a medical field, and the South co-sponsored by the Once JEi wives a r e project Carolina Political A c t i o n and Mrs. W. M. Shirley auxiliary with the Mental Hostesses had m e m b e r s recruited, it's up to the Health Association. C o m m i t t e e , the state seated at tables according to auxiliary to keep t h e m affiliate. Mrs. George C o u s a r She pointed out t h e their birthdays, with the interested through p u t t i n g organizations need money to various zodiac names on the them to work and t h e programs presented in ways carry on, that time is running _-tables to meet their needs. out to prevent doctors from rsocTar wetl-bemg, The latter She concluded by saying she being able to practice their s b e , ^ _ _ lsi™Pg T ^ Z l loves her country so very profession freely and for wives good *ings .good cars, color much, she will do all in her not losing the* free way of TVs and aU the other luxuries power to keep it free. ]ife . in addition to physical care. Mrs. George M. Grimball, She added that as state ,,_she ^ A the South Carolina county president, introduced president she could n o t Medical Society presented to the speaker and presided at 'possibly.go into all the.in- " ^ g i . 1 ° £ a ! *£, fo the meeting. She welcomed as guests Dr. sMious inroads communism organization tne request ior has made in this country, but J hls change in terms. White Charlton P. A r m s t r o n g , president of the Greenville would concentrate on the .he social welfare of people medical end which i s » too big tor the auxiliary County Medical Society Dr. definitely being invaded. * » to^y, * e C. Dayton Riddle, chairman of the advisory council to ihe She explained that the term medical care, the local auxiliary and Mrs. , being used by the medical She also told the wives that William B. Turner o f profession and the auxiliary membership controls t h e Greenwood, state auxiliary | is medical care instead of effectiveness of the entire president-elect. | health care. The latter, she auxiliary in its community s a i d , i n c l u d e d t o t a l service projects. This service care—mental, physical, and o r g a n i z a t i o n has a 70-96 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville Piedmont O c t o b e r 8, 1970 Pantsuit Craze Hits Hospital Here T h e paintsuit craze currently sweeping the country is reportedly now accepted nationwide for hospitalstaffs on-duty uniforms. Here lour employes of the department of 1 aboratories staff at Greenville General Hosaifcal are shown in their new uniforflBPThey are, left to right, Mrs. Jack Cook, histology; Miss Orinda Bramlett, hemotology; M r s . Patsy Bragg^ "chemistry and Miss Elaine Gregory, hemotology. Department officials call the new look "function* al," while the medical technicians find the attire "comfortable and we are receiving more attention than we ever did in our dress uniforms." Mrs. Cook's outfit was designed and made by herself: the others were purchased at uniform outlets. (Piedmont photo by James G. Wilson) * 70-97 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville O c t o b e r 9, News 1970 DETECTION DEVICE—Dr. Jon Owings, general surgery •esident in Greenville General Hospital's education program, demonstrates the fiberoptic gastroscope for Miss Francis Hogg, RN, member of the nursing staff. Cancer Society Presents Gastrpieope To Hospital A new $3,200 f'i b e r o p t i c Hospital. gastroscopi. * purchased by the The instrument permits direct Cancer Society 'of Greenville visualization, biopsy and still County, a member of United and movie photography of the Fund, for clinical research in internal surfaces of t h e and diagnosis of diseases and esophagus and stomach. Exconditions of the u p p e r aminations are done With the gastrointestinal tract has been patient awake, using l o c a l presented to Greenville General anesthesia and sedation. 70-98 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] HONORED BY AUXILIARY—Members of the Auxiliary to the Greenville Hospital Friday honored, from left, Mrs. F. Nathaniel Beaver, 1970 Volunteer of the Year; Mrs. L. H. Walker, 1969 Volunteer of the Year; Mrs. Dan MacMillan, first recipient of a 6,000-hour pin; and Mrs. Rulus C. Bruce, Grand Volunteer of the Years. (Greenville News photo by Fletcher W. Ross) Toomey Outlines Levels Of Care By ALICE H. SKELTON Dr. Robert E. Toomey, administrator of the Greenville Hospital System, outlined five levels he envisions in the future of medical care at the 16th annual awards luncheon of the Auxiliary to the Greenville Hospital System at the Golden Eagle Restaurant. Dr. Toomey said he sees health education for all people as the first step in maintaining health. Family counseling, planning, housing, sanitation, nutrition and environment as well as .social and mental health must be emphasized to maintain a "generally healthy condition," he said. This program, he said, would be maintained by non-medical people. A second phase, he said, would be primary care with "general practitioners able to handle most illnesses in the community tfith adequacy and well." This step would lead to the specialized level of care in the specialist's office, in a hospital, medical school, or "wherever the care is that you need," he said. Rehabilitative or restorative care would follow, he said, to all who could not recover completely or who need longterm follow-up care to return them to society in useful roles. The final level would be custodial care on a medical level for patients w i t h terminal illnesses. "Our job," the speaker said, "is to establish services and care in a system with a specifically d e f i n e d relationship with physicians so that they do not give up their privacy or independence, but can provide care in an organized, integrated manner." Toomey said he had no answer for financing such a far-reaching system, but he said he trusted the democratic process to reach a compromise between extremes such as an insurance coverage plan proposed by the American Medical Association and another proposed by "liberals" Sens. Kennedy and Javitz and AFL-CIO head Walter Reuther. "Medicine today is 100 per cent different from 40 years ago," Toomey said. "What can be done now is not just 'hopeful' but a promise to preserve your life." He concluded with an excerpt from a speech he made recently in Houston, Tex., in which he cited awesome medical advances he termed a "tribute to tbe triumph of one mind" on one hand to a "condemnation of mind and soul" on the other. Medicine today promises enlightenment, hope, freedom from pain and disease, he said, but at the same time it must promise to free men's hearts from disease. During the presentation of awards, Mrs. C. Dan MacMillan was recipient of the first 6,000-hour pin awarded by the auxiliary Mrs. John E. Wright made the presentation. Mrs. Rufus C. Bruce was named Grand Volunteer of the Year. She was awarded a gold bracelet by S. Lewis Condron, a member of the board of trustees of the Greenville Hospital System. The 1970 Volunteer of the Year award went to Mrs. F. Nathaniel Beaver, who accepted a silver bowl from L. Stanton Tuttle. Mrs. Marie R. Harris, director of nursing, recognized Mrs. L. H. Walker as the 1969 Volunteer of the Year. A 5,000-hour pin was presented Mrs. John Wright by Mrs. Nick Hunter. Mrs. Condron presented 3,000-hour pins to Mrs. Bruce, Mrs. Robert L. Brown, Mrs. W. Frank Vaughan and Mrs. Angela Atkins. She awarded 2,000-hour pins to Mrs. C. B. McLeod and Mrs. Walker. Pins for 1.000 hours were presented Mrs. F. Nathaniel Beaver, Mrs. V, C. Long, Mrs. Irene Edwards, Mrs. Richard J. McCauley and Mrs. H. Douglas Wheale. Mrs. Harmon Henderson presented 500-hour pins to Mrs. Peter Bylenga, Mrs. Carolyn Griggs, Mrs. J. B. Hart, Mrs. Frank Larkin, Mrs. William R. McKibbon, Mrs. Rodney Phibbs and Mrs. Jay Sponseller. Mrs. E. A. Ballentine, Mrs. Morgan Barnhill, Mrs. Jack Charlotte, Mrs. Henry Elrod, Mrs. Frank Espey, Mrs. Marie Griffin, Mrs. Charles A. Huneycutt, Mrs. K. B. Hopper, Mrs. W. T. Hudgens, Mrs. Grace Hunt, Mrs. William B. James, Mrs. T. B. Kimbrough, Miss Nancy Lathem, Mrs. Mattie Lou LeGrand, Mrs. M. E. Looney, Mrs. Jack Merritt, Mrs. John H. Randolph, Mrs. C. Randall Shelton, Mrs. Robert F. Smathers, Mrs. L. W. Turner, Mrs. A. W. Williams, Mrs. Joe Wright, Mrs. Chester Snyder, Mrs. Ben Sloan and Mrs. J. L. Bauer. Mrs. Robert L. Brown, auxiliary president, also recognized Mrs. John W. Stanley, auxiliary c o n t r o l l e r , and presented her a silver bud vase in appreciation for her service. Receiving 100-hour p i^n s The invocation was given were the following mem- by the Rev. Allen Long and bers: the benediction by Chaplain John Smith. 70-99 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville News O c t o b e r 11, 1970 Hospital Chairman Is Elected S. Lewis Condron has been elected chairman of the sevenmember board of trustees of the Greenville Hospital System. He succeeds W. W. McEachern, chairman for the past year. Other officers elected along with Condron, a partner in S. D. Leidesdorf Company and a leader in Greenville civic and community affairs, were David E. Cromwell, vice chairman; and Harry Daniel of Greer, secretary. Cromwell, executive vice president of Woodside Mills, and Daniel, president of the Bank of Greer, were renamed to positions they held on the board last year. McEachern, honorary chairman of the board of South Carolina National Bank, has one year remaining of his six-year tenure on the Hospital System board. He will serve as chairman of the finance committee. Other board members are Herman N. Hipp, president of Liberty Life Insurance Company; Thomas K. Johnstone Jr., partner with Haynsworth, Perry, Bryant, Marion, and Johnstone, attorneys; and William H. Orders, president of Orders Tile and Distributing Company, Inc. Condron, a native of Elgin, Tex., has resided in Greenville since 1947. He did his undergraduate work at Bowling Green College of Commerce and received his master's in business administration from Harvard Business School. He is a certified public accountant in South Carolina and Texas. He has been active in many programs and organizations; chairman of Greenville County Foundation and of the United Fund; past president, Greenville Kiwanis' Club; past president of the Greenville Little Theatre, and a member of the boards of Greater Greenville Chamber .<& Commerce and Blood Assurance Plan. He was tecipient of the Diamond Merit A w a r d of the Greenville Chapter of Administrative Management Society, and Greenville Jaycees awarded him the 1960 "Boss of the Year" award. 70-100 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] T h e G r e e n v i l l e News PniiffPi Arivpr'l^ement O c t o b e r 2 5 , 1970 Poljfi'-fll Ad^er't^eme^t Pnijt.ipal Adver Isement CtiARDSON OPPOSES SITUATION Greenville General Hospital is presently partially financed by a 6 - m i l l levy on Greenville County residents. However, residents of any other county of South Carolina or state of the United States are readily admitted here, causing the tremendously overcrowded condition which exists. I would advocate t h a t no out-of-county patient be admitted to Greenville General Hospital except upon certification from a qualified physician t h a t the patient's life would be endangered if not admitted, and would f u r t h er advocate that the county in which a charity patient resides be required to pay any and all hospital costs incurred not covered under medicaid. William D. Richardson VOTE W,D. (BILLY) RICHARDSON House Of Representatives 70-101 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] MONDAY, OCTOBER _«, I 97» """"V TBE G R E E N V I L L E N E W S , G R E E N V I L L E , SOUTH *AGE C A R O L I N A I I I N T T - T H R E E Greenville Hospital System Grows Into Comprehensive Medical Care Center "Time present and time are both present . . . in time future" for the G r e e n v i l l e Hospital System, which developed from its beginnings in Greenville in 1911 into one of the most progressive and comprehensive medical care centers in the South. Director Robert E. Toomey of the Greenville H o s p i t a l System has noted the tremendous community effort and support which has been involved and largely responsible for its growth, progress a n d complishments. The movement for a hospital Ln Greenville dates back to 1895. A number of citizens, including many women, became alarmed when two workmen were taken ill with typhoid and had to he cared for in the Perry Avenue boarding House •where they lived. The Women's Hospital Board, with the backing of civic-minded community leaders, over some 15 years, concentrated their attention and fund-raising efforts to secure a hospital for the town. In 1909, their zeal resulted in the opening of a twa-room clinic (in the building later known as the Salvation Army Citadel) adjacent to the Greenville News-Piedmont Company, on Broad Street. Two years later, the board had raised $16,000 t o w a r d purchase of the Corbett building, at the corner of Arlington Avenue and Memminger Street, formerly used as a private sanitorium. In 1911, when Greenville had a population of 11,000, the first hospital began operations. Since nurses were needed, the School of Nursing was opened in January, 1912. According to historical accounts, students not only studied and learned to care patients, but along with members of the nursing staff, they also had the tasks of scrubbing and cleaning the rooms and mopping hallways. In 1918, the City of Greenville acquired the institution and operated it as City Hospital. The old Corbett building was enlarged and the name was changed in 1935 to Greenville General Hospital. A citizens Committee was formed in 1947 to study means of operating the hospital on non-profit basis for the benefit of all taxpayers and residents of the county. Its recom' mendations were approved in a referendum, a n d necessary legislation, introduced by Greenville County Legislative Delegation in the South Carolina General Assembly, followed. Under the legislative ownership and authority for operating and m a i n t a i n hospital facilities of Greenville General Hospital was vested in an i n d e p e n d e n t , selfperpetuating board of trustees, on behalf of all the people of the county. Later, the act was amended to include the hospitals and programs under the corporate name of the Greenville Hospital System. Noting that advances and specialization in medicine have created new hospital needs, Dr. Toomey said, "In our major hospital today, we have our Around 1900 a private hospital -with 16 rooms and a tile operating room was opened at 421 E. Washington St. by Dr. W. C. Black. Black's Sanitarium was in operation until City Hospital was opened in 1918. The site now is a parking lot. recovery room, intensive care, Education Center, for the care coronary care, and spinal cord of children with emotional disturbances. injury units. In our special Under construction on Grove procedures laboratory, we are Road are the 303 - bed Generaldoing heart catheterizations and Medical Surgical Hospital, the other delicate r a d i o l o g i c Diagnostic and T r e a t m e n t Center and the Roger C. Peace procedures. Institute f o r Rehabilitative "Since Greenville has served Medicine, with a 50-bed capacias a focal point to attract physi- ty, and the energy plant for cians and specialists in all fields heating and air conditioning. of medicine, we have become Ground was broken for these a medical center. Our patients can now be diagnosed and treated in facilities h e r e , whereas in former years they had to travel to Duke or Emory Universities or more distant medical centers for the same tests and types of surgery." With Greenville G e n e r a l Hospita! as the parent institution, the first hospital division in outlying areas was the Allen Bennett Memorial I Hospital at Greer, which opened in 1952. An expansion program I brought the bed capacity to 540 at Greenville General Hospital, where today 615 patients can be accommodated in o.ertaxed facilities. The Roger Huntington Nursing Center, with 80 beds, at Greer, and the 40-bed Hillcrest Hospital at Simpsonville were opened in 1963. Subsequently, additions were built to Allen Bennett, Memorial Hospital for a total j bed capacity of 63, further enlargement has been announced by the board at a cost of $2,500,000. After in-depth study of Green-1 ville County health needs, the hospital trustees purchased 128 acres on Grove Road in 1966 for an expansion program and for development of a major 1 health complex to serve com-' munity requirements. In 1967, the William G. Sirrinej Hospital, planned and designed for the care of chronic andl convalescent patients, and which, is also being used for the eye operatory, on Pendleton Street was opened. The sixth and latest unit of the hospital system is the Marshall I. P i c k e n s ! Hospital, for the care of thei mentally ill, first structure built; on the Grove Road property,! along with the Children's Re- facilities in November, They are scheduled for completion in April, 1972. The new Grove Road facilities will cost $21,000,000. Hillcrest Hospital at Simpsonville, which has semi-private accommodations, will be enlarged, and the board and members of the county delegation and County Council are continuing to study plans for a facility in north Greenville County. From its beginnings to the present, the Greenville Hospita' System has made the transition of being a minor, relatively small institution with minimal economic impact on the community, into an organization which has s i g n i f i c a n t importance as a medical csnter and'has a major economic impact throughout the area. Projections for community growth win make new demands on the Hospital System, Toomey said. "Projections as regards medical practice will present us with new dimensions in hosoital activities. As we look back at the past and see whst '_as been done in curing disease, undoubtedly, the future will be focused on maintenance of health — rather than curing disease, and this, too, will cause changes and create demands on the hospital's endeavors." Off Grove Road in south Greenville, construction is progressing on new facilities of the Greenville Hospital System. When completed and equipped, they will cost some $21 million. Shown is the architectural rendering ol the 308-bed general medical-surgical hospital and diagnostic and treatment center, scheduled for completion m 1972- Also under construction is the nearby io-bed Roger C. Peace Institute for Rehabilitative Medicine (not shown). _ The Greenville News O c t o b e r 2 6 , 1970 T R I - C E N T E N N I A L EDITION STORY 70-102 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] The Greenville P i e d m o n t O c t o b e r 27, 1970 Volunteers Ahead A t Work On Car By FRANCES EVANS "ONE WHO ENTERS into or offers himself for a particular area, assisting in assembling singers, etc. for any service of his own free will." Pink Ladies will perhaps be among the That's the way the dictionary defines first of the volunteers for the annual Christmas "volunteer." Program on December 6, when There are plenty of them in Greenville, Caroling singers collect funds for the younger patients serving you. of the Greenville area. And the "Pink Ladies" at Greenville General Mrs. Slaker, who has devoted much of Hospital no doubt would head the list. Oops! her time during the past 10 years to hospital Mayibe we shouldn't call them Pink Ladies, volunteer work, has participated in because male volunteers (youths and older preliminary sessions on caroling in recent men) might take issue with the title.' But weeks. And she, with Mrs. Lou (Robert L.) those referred to as Pink Ladies are the Brown, auxiliary president, will become even women volunteers who don pink pinafores more involved as the date nears. Mrs. Brown, and go throughout the hospital performing all with about six years in volunteer work, must kinds of tasks and providing many, many divide her time between family, home, four services for the patients. children and the hospital. Actually the volunteer organization's correct It has been said many times, if you want title is Auxiliary to Greenville General something done, ask those who are the busiest. Hospital (and men are involved). But the It must be true. volunteer effort expands much farther than the hospital walls. MRS. SLAKER considers the caroling project important, but talks enthusiastically SUCH WOULD BE the case of the Christmas about the whole auxiliary program. Auxiliary Caroling Program, sponsored by the auxiliary, volunteers assist wherever needed in the which involves volunteers from the entire hospital, from the pediatrics floor (where Greenville area as well as a u x i l i a r y caroling funds are used) to handling and members. distribution of the mail. If you could talk personally witfn Mrs. The auxiliary about 187 strong (in addition Peggy (R.V.) Slaker, vice president of the to 250 Candy Stripers), provides chairmen auxiliary and public relations committee for various departments and areas of the chairman, you probably would go right out hospital. Sometimes a special area calls for and volunteer — for any worthy project. a special person. The Marshall I. Pickens She can make you a believer of volunteering. Hospital volunteer would be a "special handPeggy is very serious about volunteer work, picked" individual, Mrs. Slaker explained. which she somehow manages to weave into Perhaps everyone is familiar with the gift a busy schedule (that includes an active cart manned by volunteers, but many other lO-year-old daughter). And it did her a service valuable services may go unheralded. one*: it; kept1 her too busy to worry when In ff mWi'Jyi a student at the University PEGGY PUT IN A plea for of Georgia, was in Vietnam. "We just don't have enough. Volunteefjt<.are concentrating on caroling she said. these days,'al^king an effort to recruit other If you're interested, just cod? volunteers. ^ teer office at the hospital. Arid if yonVare "We need volunteers from every single male, I'm sure you won't be dubbed as a area," Peggy says. She emphasized the need "Pink Lady," since the pink pinafore lis not for those who would assume responsibility manadatory for male volunteers. 70-103 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] 19MCaroling Project Gets enthusiastic Start "It warmed the cockles of my ole Irish heart to see the enthusiasm shown by the auxiliary volunteers toward the Chirstmas C a ro 1 in g Program." That was the way Mrs; Nancy O'Neill, executive coordinator for the caroling program, a project of the Auxiliary to Greenville General Hospital, described the volunteer effort. Mrs. O'Neill and other volunteers attended a coffee at the Nurses Residence of Greenville General Hospital Monday to kick off the caroling, which will be held during the week of Dec. 6-13. Dr. Robert N. DuBose, 1989 general chairman was recognized for "outstanding dedication and strong interest." Also recognized was the 1970 general chairman, 'Buck Mickel, president of Daniel Construction Co. Auxiliary volunteers were informed of changes iff the 1970 caroling program. A special day will be set aside but the singing will continue throughout the following week, wiih singers in a particular area participating whenever convenient. Collections will be turned in to G r e e n v i l l e Memorial Auditorium Dec. 13. The purpose of the caroling program, Mrs. Robert L. Brown, auxiliary president, said, is not to set a monetary goal in order to achieve an amount to surpass a previous year. The prime object of Christmas caroling, she said, is to allow all of Greenville County's children to actively participate in a worthwhile Christmas endeavor which benefits other children. "The promoting of the spirit of Christmas is just as significant as the voluntary contributions received," M r s . O'Neill said. Dr. DuBose Honored Mrs. Robert L. Brown, president of the Auxiliary to Meenville General Hospital,-presents. Dr. Robert N»DuBose, 1969 general chairman of the Christmas Caroling Program, a plaque for outstanding service during last year's caroling. (Greenville Piedmont photo by Leon E. Carnes) The Greenville Piedmont - ACTION O c t o b e r 30, LINE 1970 Q. What happened to the plans for building a branch of general hospital in the Marietta-Travelers Rest area? I mean the one for which we have been paying taxes? — B.J.W., Marietta, L.H., Travelers Rest. He Hospital System officials said.-? the7jjjj|£>osed hospital are receiving detail by authorities of the Upper Greenvillth District, Greenville County Legislative Deleg Greenville County Council and the Greenville Hospital System. To date, no special taxes under the hospital district for that area have been levied, they said.. Q. I realize that Greenville General Hospital is federally funded,, therefore, no exemption for admission can be made. However, I wonder why, since Greenville County residents paid for the hospital bond issues, they couldft't have some kind of preference over adjacent »l»nties? For instance, Pickens Couniy just voted aga^pit building a county hospita^. Would it not be feasible for local residents to have priority on rooms when people from other counties are involved? Why couldn't we set hospital fees like state-supported colleges and require out-of -county residents to pay a higher rate for hospitalization, except for emergency admission? — M.H. A. Hospital officials said residents of Greenville County already are and will be given priority over all other admissions in assignments of beds, in all cases of elective admissions (other t h a n emergencies). The Greenville Hospital System, of which Greenville General is the parent institution and the center of major medical services in the area, receives some federal appropriations in limited amounts to help toward construction of buildings. They said t h a t no increase in fees, such as you suggest, are imposed on people traveling over South Carolina roads, just because they are from other states; nor do tickets cost more for performances at Greenville Memorial Auditorium and football stadiums at Clemson, Columbia and Charleston, which were built and are maintained at state expense. . i_ Your proposal is similat ,J t(«Bi^ers presented in the past and hospital offlctats-Tsaid they do not oppose the philosophy of-yoi.^thoughts and basic suggestion. However, when all ftdPtors are considered, implementing such a policy would pose difficulties to the hospitals and contribute to costs, as well as be perhaps unhamanitarian. | 170-104 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Toomey Takes Hospitdv^eat HOUSTON Tex. 4fAP> - A South Carolina min was electled to the board of directors of the American Hospital Association Wednesday. And a North Carolina man was elected to the ruling House of Delegates. Elected to a three-year term on the board was Robert E. Toomey of Greenville, S. C. Elected to a three-year term on an at-large basis, as a member of the House of Delegates was John N. MacJJfelgfiS of Chapel Hill, N. C. They were cho§en at the association's 72nd annual convention. The Greenville News N o v e m b e r 3, 1970 THE GREENVILLE PIEDMONT N o v e m b e r 1 0 , 1970 Fire Alarm Causes Student Nurses To Get Wet A small fire at the General Hospital School of Nursing residence sent occupants scurrying into the chill rain today. A City Fire Department spokesman said the "fire" consisted only of a hot motor on a vending machine. Students nurses are routinely evacuated when a fire alarm is given. (Piedmont photo by Fletcher W. ROss) 70-105 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] JGREENVILLE PIEDMONT N o v e m b e r 2 3 , 1970 Hospital Reports Inconttgr The GreenviH^I o s p i t a 1 The GreenvB|l*H System generated <a n approximate gross hospital income of $18.6 million in its services to some 135,000 medical and nursing care patients during the fiscal year which ended Oct. 4. The system, consisting of six hospitals, was cited nationally for planning and comprehensive innovations in the health care field during the year. Three more hospital divisions under construction are expected to be occupied in the spring of 1972. The system reported 205 employes per 100 patients for its 900 beds as compared to the national average of 270 employes in similar s i z e d hospitals. In the system's six hospitals, there were 36,656 p a t i e n t s discharged from all six existing hospital divisions. Clinic visits in the facilities at Greenville General totaled 33,434 compared to 31,644 in 1969, and there were 13,000 physician referrals for outpatient services. Emergency room visits for 1970 totaled 53,465 with 43.254 patients treated at Greenville General, 7,405 at Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital, and 2,806 at Hillcrest Hospital. The 1969 total was 47,168. Births totaled 4,067, X-ray examinations 80,173 and laboratory tests 610,675, operations 14,518. There were 1.120,319 meals served and 3,5§4j£MO pounds of linen laundecSMKor the six hospital divisksfflt* Adult pahem days totaled 290,347 aiflT the number of employes per in-patient averag,ed 2.1. THE GREENVILLE D e c e m b e r 1, PIEDMONT 1970 Plant Will Process Pre-Cooked Foods ; : Officials of AGS F o o d System, Inc., of Greenville today announced a new food processing system and the start of construction on a $500,000 production facility at Greenville's Donaldson Center. AGS marketing vice president G. Donald Gibbins said the product will be available under the trade n a m e Savorvac b e g i n n i n g in February in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. Gibbins said the AGS vacuum pouched, portioned, deep chilled and pre-cooked entrees and vegetables provide a menu of hot items for volume feeders of all types. Col. Ambrose T. McGuckian, corporation president, said tlie process used is one which evolved from a joint research program entered into by the Anderson Memorial Hospital, the Greenville H o s p i t a l System a n d Spartanburg General Hospital, with assistance from the Duke Endowment and the Cryovac division of W. R. Grace & Co. Purpose of the study was to develop a better system f o r preparing, packaging, preserving and serving food in these i n s t i t u t i o n s . McGuckian was project director for the study and went on to form the company to bring the result of the study to a commercial state. The participating hospitals are entitled to use the process, McGuckian said, adding that foods processed by these methods have been used by the Greenville H o s p i t a l System for the past two years. Greater Greenville Chamber of Commerce p r e s i d e n t Thomas A. Roe said the AGS development is a welcome one for the area. The facility at Donaldson will produce three million pounds of processed food annually, he noted. M c G u c k i a n said the Donaldson facility will serve the tri-state market with products tailored to regional tastes and needs. "We will be calling on hospitals first," McGuckian said, "but the system applies equally well to industrial cafeterias, motels, hotels, colleges, school systems and all other volume feeders, whether internally managed or on contract food service." Company officials s a i d that,in addition, they feel the housewife may be interested in the simplicity of preparing and serving Savorvac products and that they are now considering a factory outlet. The 10,000 square f o o t Donaldson building was designed by J. Harold Mack and will be constructed by M. L. Garrett of Greenville. The Cryovac Co. developed special machinery and the plastic vajum pouch used in the sy HPfel_* 70-106 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] Corporate .ioffflpls include William W e b"s t c r III, chairman of the b o a r d ; William N. Page, treasurer' and Richard W. R i l e y , ^secretary. General's 60-Year-Old School^ OL Nursing To Be Phased Oat By MIRIAM GOODSPEED G r e e n v i l l e General Hospital's School of Nursing will graduate its final class in 1974, thus closing its 60year-old dijrifccna n u r s i n g educatlbffprippm here. Announcement of the nursing school's phasing out was made today by Robert E. Toomey, director of Greenville Hospital System. Also present was Mrs. Marie R. Harris, RN, administrator for nursing service of Greenville General Hospital, and head of the school of nursing here. The nursing school will ac- lenville Hospital System director Robert E. Toomey today announced the phasing out of the Greenville General Hospital School of Nursing. the nursing school were both economic a n d educational ones. "Clemson has already opened its school of nursing and Greenville TEC is scheduled to open its training program in the fall of 1971," Toomey said. He explained that these programs would assure the "IT IS HARD to close a Piedmont area of having as school which has been so many or more student nurses superbly successful, and I in training as there are now. have a great affection for both "Closing our school will not school and faculty," • h e affect in any way the care observed, "but it is no longer of our patients at Greenville appropriate for us to continue General Hospital," he stressit." ed," because, with advances Reasons given for closing in medical techniques, it is necessary to have registered nurses on the floors 24 hours a day." cept its final nurses training class in August, 1971. "We will continue the same high caliber and accredited program we have taught in the past until every student finishes our training program," Toomey promised. Appearing at the news conference with him was Mrs. Marie R. Harris, head of the nursing school. (Piedmont photo by James G. Wilson) HE ADDED that b o t h schools' student nurses would continue to take their lab training in the Greenville Hospital system, as they do currently. Education-wise, it is better for the students to take college and university nurses training programs, Mrs. Harris said, so that if a student wishes, she may continue her studies to receive her B.A. and more advanced degrees. "A student nurse, who graduates from a hospital school of nursing, must often, if she wishes to continue her education, repeat at least two years of college work because the universities refuse to accent credits from nursing sctaols," Mrs. Harris explained. "Also, today it is necessary for a nurse to receive all the advanced training she can because of the many new medical techniques w h i c h have been discovered in recent years." She added that, although the hospital nursing school tuition was in some respects less ex- 70-107 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] pensive IFTan a university's because the student traded service for tuition, there are a number of f e d e r a l scholarships available f o r nursing students. GREENVILLE'*' 'nursing school, which is sponsored by funds from the hospital's gross profits, costs the local hospital more in terms of sponsorship than it receives in services from the student nurses, Toomey pointed out. He said that the school's , faculty will be absorbed into the hospital's c o n t i n u i n g education a n d orientation program for newly employed nurses and in the student nurses lab program. Toomey pointed out that the concept of hospital nursing schools is a dying one, and that out of 13 such programs in South Carolina in 1963, only two remain. The second remaining hospital program is in Orangeburg. Imgge Problem Harts Recruiting For Dietary Technician Course By SAM ZIMMERMAN, A brochure on dietetic technology explains that "the dietary technician is a specialist in the science of foods and the nutritional requirements of the human body." The brochure is published by Greenville TEC, and Miss Cary Prickett, health career consultant for the S.C. Appalachian Health Policy Planning Council, assures applicants the description as accurate. The council is sponsor of the course in d i e t e t i c technology described by TEC. Miss Prickett's job involves recruitment of students for classes that lead to careers in health. Her task has been hampered somewhat by the fact that not many people, especially would-be students, know what the course is. "They believe it is mainly cooking and sewing," Miss Prickett said. "We do have an image problem to overcome," said Dr. John Manly, dean of the paramedical division at TEC. He quoted one prospective student as saying, "I've been in the kitchen all my life. "NOW I WANT to take something that will get me out of the kitchen," she lamented. Miss Prickett explained that perhaps one reason for the lack of information sbiat dietary technology may be that "it is a brand new area." The two-year course was instituted because of a shortage of dieticians. "The d i e t a r y technician plays a vital role in the prevention of disease and in the rapid recovery of the sick," the consultant said. "Technicians work with tne dietician, or sometimes alone,to plan and prepare meals in h o s p i t a l s , institutions, homes or wherever a nutritional specialist is needed. "They help plan menus for special patients, such as heart attack victims and those who have suffered strokes. "They may also test new foods for vitamin content where there is a question of whether a food is nutritionally good for a patient," she said. A HIGH school diploma or its equivalent is the only requirement for enrollment. In addition, students also must take a Differential Aptitude Test to make sure necessary aptitudes are present. At the end of the program, graduates are awarded an Associate of Applied Science degree. Credits earned in the class can be transferred to Limestone College in Gaffney, where they may be applied toward a BS degree in science. The course is open to men and women. Those who have an interest in preparing food and the composition of foods are especially urged to investigate enrollment. Both Manly and M i s s Prickett pointed out t h e serious need for t r a i n e d dietary technicians in the state and nation. A new class will begin in Januarv at TEC. • S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 14, 1970 Unfold for c o m p l e t e s t o r y and p i c t u r e Mrs. Shirlene Phillips confers with Don Waddell, in bed, about the proper diet during his hospital stay as p a r t of her duties as diet technician. (Piedmont photos by Bennie J. Granger) Mrs. A.B. Coe, a diet technician, checks food temperatures at Greenville General Hospital. 70-108 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] T H E G R E E N V I L L E N . L •'_. November 21, 1970 DR. R. C. BROWNLEE DON R. DAVIS Greenville Hospital Appoints Don Davis Don R. Davis has been appointed to the position of assistant director of planning and development of the Greenville Hospital System, Robert E. Toomey, director, announced. Davis, a native of Alabama, has served six months of residency requirements in hospital administration at Greenville General Hospital for his master's d e g r e e requirements from the University of Alabama. Last fall, he w a s administrative resident with the South C a r o l i n a Appalachia Health Planning Council. He was graduated f r o m Auburn University with a B.A. in aeronautioaL ^ministration and matricul in 199fcin the School of Hi Ser™ice s Administratioi it the Lta^ersity of Alabama dical Center to work on his master of science degree in hospital administration. Brownlee Appointed Director Dr. Robert C. Brownlee Jr., nationally known in the field of pediatrics, has been appointed medical education director for the department of pediatrics at Greenville General Hospital. Robert E. Toomey, hospital director, said the appointment will be effective Dec. 1. At Greenville G e n e r a l , Brownlee is a senior associate in pediatrics and chairman of the pediatrics department. He has practiced with the Christie Pediatric Group since 1951. Brownlee, secretary for the section on pediatrics of the American Medical Association, will begin work on full approval for the pediatric residency program here as well as recruiting young physicians as members of the house staff for the pediatrics department Brownlee also will assist in organizing the family practice residency which is expected to begin here July 1, 1971. Brownlee, a native of Due West, completed study a t Erskine College and Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. He served his internship and residency at V a n d e r b i l t University Department • o f Pediatrics and the .University of Virginia and is former chief resident at Yanderbilt's department of pediatrics. 70-109 [ search engine powered by magazooms.com ] APPOINTED — Mrs. Peggy Ellis Dulaney has been appointed director of nursing service for the Marshall I. Pickens Hospital, a d m i n i strator Frank D. Pinckney announced. A native of Greenville, Mrs. Dulaney received her B.A. and master's degree in community mental health nursing from Duke University. She also was an instructor in the nursing, detriment at Dorothea DuHfospital in Raleigh, N.C.Wnd at Norfolk General Hospital ""School of Professional Nursing. Leaves Medi-Data The Greenville H o s p i t a l System has withdrawn from Medi-Data, Inc., a pilot program for utilization and application of computers in hospital opera-! tions, Robert E. Toomey, direc-| tor, announced. Toomey said future efforts in this area of electronic data processing will be concentrated toward programs d e s i g n e d especially for the hospital divisions within the G r e e n v i l l e Hospital system. "We fully recognize and appreciate t h e n e e d for determining a n d implementing better ways to do more work at a lesser ^nit cost, which are important and( meaningful to medical and' holpital operations with the ispecific interests of our patiernS and the community in mind," Toomey said.-
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